Original paper

Detritus processing by endemic and non-native Hawaiian stream invertebrates: a microcosm study of species-specific effects

Larned, Scott T.; Kinzie, Robert A.; Covich, Alan P.; Chong, Charles T.

Abstract

In studies of detritus processing in streams, invertebrate detritivores are often pooled into functional groups of species that have similar feeding modes. Differences among functional groups in detritus processing are well-known, but differences among species within functional groups are rarely considered. Introductions of non-native species and losses of native populations are changing the composition of detritivore assemblages in many streams, and a species-specific approach is needed to understand the effects of these changes on detritus processing. In this study, we compared the rates at which the native and non-native invertebrate detritivores from streams on the Island of Hawai'i processed detrital leaves. Experimental treatments consisted of single detritivore species and species-pairs. Results from species-pairs were used to determine whether interspecific interactions increased (facilitated) or decreased (inhibited) rates of detritus processing. Results of the single-species treatments indicated that the endemic shrimp Atyoida bisulcata and the non-native crayfish Procambarus clarkii significantly increased rates of leaf processing compared with controls with no animals; two other non-native and one other endemic species did not have significant effects. For all species-pairs, observed processing rates were not significantly different from rates predicted in the absence of interaction, i.e., the sum of the effects of each species alone. At present, P. clarkii is the only leaf-shredding stream invertebrate in Hawai'i. P. clarkii processed detrital leaves > 10 times faster than the other species, and any facilitory or inhibitory interactions between P. clarkii and other species are likely to be small relative to the effects of P. clarkii alone. Results of the experiments suggest that detritus shredding is not a significant trophic pathway in Hawaiian streams inhabited by native macroinvertebrates, but can become significant following the establishment of non-native species.

Keywords

detritushawaiimacroinvertebratenon-native speciesshredderspecies interactionsstreams