Invertebrate drift and benthic community dynamics in a lowland neotropical stream, Costa Rica

Ramirez A, Pringle CM


HYDROBIOLOGIA
386: 19-26 1998

Abstract:
In this study we quantified invertebrate drift and related it to the structure of the benthic community, over a 6-8 month period, in a 4th-order tropical stream in Costa Rica. Relative to reports from similar-sized temperate and tropical streams, drift densities were high (2-fold greater: mean 11.2 m(-3); range 2.5-25 m(-3)), and benthic insect densities were relatively low (>3-fold lower: mean 890 m(-2); range 228-1504 m(-2)). Drift was dominated by larval shrimps that represented more than 70% of total drift on any given date; the remaining 30% was composed of 54, insect taxa. Among insects, Simuliidae and Chironomidae (Diptera) and Baetidae, Leptohyphes and Tricorythodes (Ephemeroptera) comprised 24% of total drift. Drift periodicity was strongly nocturnal, with peaks at 18:00 h (sunset) and 03:00 h. Our results, and those of previous experiments in the study stream, suggest that nighttime drift is driven by the presence of predatory diurnal drift-feeding fishes and nocturnal adult shrimps. There were no clear seasonal patterns over both 'dry' and wet seasons, suggesting that benthic communities are subject to similar stresses throughout the year, and that populations grow and reproduce continuously.

Author Keywords:
drift dynamics, larval shrimp migrations, diel periodicity, benthos, tropical streams

KeyWords Plus:
MACROINVERTEBRATE DRIFT, TROPICAL STREAMS, LIFE-HISTORY, RIVER, DECAPODA, POPULATION, PATTERNS, MAYFLIES, SHRIMPS, INSECTS

Addresses:
Ramirez A, Univ Georgia, Inst Ecol, Athens, GA 30602 USA
Univ Georgia, Inst Ecol, Athens, GA 30602 USA

Publisher:
KLUWER ACADEMIC PUBL, SPUIBOULEVARD 50, PO BOX 17, 3300 AA DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS

IDS Number:
186GE

ISSN:
0018-8158