Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/346
Title: Macroinvertebrate functional feeding groups in Kenyan highland streams: evidence for a diverse shredder guild
Authors: Masese, F.
Kitaka, N.
Kipkemboi, J.
Gettel, G.
Irvine, K.
McClain, M.
Keywords: Detritivore shredders
Stream invertebrates
Ecosystem function
Gut content analysis
Omnivory
Trophic relationships
Potamonautes spp
Organic matter
Riparian disturbance
Afrotropical streams
Issue Date: 2014
Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
Citation: Freshwater Science, Vol. 33 No. 2 pp. 435-450
Abstract: Data on the functional composition of invertebrates in tropical streams are needed to develop models of ecosystem functioning and to assess anthropogenic effects on ecological condition. We collected macroinvertebrates during dry and wet seasons from pools and riffles in 10 open- and 10 closed-canopy Kenyan highland streams. We classified macroinvertebrates into functional feeding groups (FFGs), which we used to assess effects of riparian condition and season on functional organization. We used cluster analysis of gut contents to classify 86 taxa as collectors, predators, scrapers, or shredders. We classified 23 taxa whose guts were empty or had indistinguishable contents based on literature. In total, we identified 43 predators, 26 collectors, 19 scrapers, and 19 shredders. Total abundance was higher in open-canopy agricultural streams, and species richness was higher in closed-canopy forested streams. Predators and shredders dominated richness and biomass, respectively, in the closed-canopy streams. The shredders, Potamonautes spp. (Brachyura:Potamonautidae) and Tipula spp. (Diptera:Tipulidae), made up >80% of total biomass in most samples containing both. Canopy cover and litter biomass strongly influenced shredder distribution. Seven shredder taxa occurred only in closed-canopy forested streams, and few shredder taxa occurred in areas of low litter input. Collectors dominated abundance at all sites. Richness and biomass of scrapers increased during the dry season, and more shredder taxa were collected during the rainy season. Temperate keys could not be used to assign some tropical invertebrates to FFGs, and examination of gut contents was needed to ascertain their FFGs. The Kenyan highland streams harbor a diverse shredder assemblage that plays an important role in organic matter processing and nutrient cycling.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/346
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