Green Peter T, Lake P S, O'Dowd Dennis J
Department of Biological Sciences, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria 3168, Australia, , , , , , AU.
Oecologia. 1999 May;119(3):435-444. doi: 10.1007/s004420050805.
Litter processing by macroinvertebrates typically involves suites of species that act together to determine rates of breakdown and decomposition. However, tropical oceanic islands and coastal fringes on continents are often dominated by one or a few species of omnivorous land crabs that consume leaf litter. We used an exclusion experiment, together with other leaf removal and litter decomposition studies, to assess the role of a single dominant species, the red crab (Gecarcoidea natalis), in litter dynamics in rain forest on Christmas Island, Indian Ocean. In the presence of red crabs, litter cover and biomass varied seasonally, from almost complete cover and high biomass at the end of the dry season to almost total absence of litter at the end of each wet season. When crabs were excluded from both the shaded understory and light gaps in rain forest, litter increased rapidly to almost complete cover, which was then maintained year round. Leaf tether experiments, and measures of litter input and standing crops, indicated that red crabs monopolize litter processing, removing between 39 and 87% of the annual leaf fall from the forest floor. Rates of litter turnover were over twice as high in the presence of land crabs: the decomposition constant, k, was 2.6 in the understory exclusion plots, but rose to 6.0 in the presence of crabs. Red crabs occur at biomass densities (114 g m) far greater than those reported elsewhere for entire litter faunas. They significantly reduced the abundance of other litter invertebrates, but we did not detect any change in the relative frequencies of the major invertebrate groups (mites, collembolans, pulmonate snails, ants, psocopterans, and spiders). Wherever omnivorous land crabs are abundant, their activities may be paramount in litter decomposition and in regulating the rate of nutrient cycling. In monopolizing litter processing, they may also be important physical "ecosystem engineers", translocating organic matter and nutrients into the soil and reducing available habitat for other animals.
大型无脊椎动物对凋落物的处理通常涉及一系列共同作用以决定分解速率的物种。然而,热带海洋岛屿和大陆沿海边缘地区往往由一种或几种杂食性陆地蟹类主导,它们以落叶为食。我们通过一项排除实验以及其他落叶去除和凋落物分解研究,来评估印度洋圣诞岛雨林中单一优势物种红蟹(Gecarcoidea natalis)在凋落物动态中的作用。在有红蟹存在的情况下,凋落物覆盖度和生物量随季节变化,从旱季末几乎完全覆盖且生物量较高,到每个雨季末几乎完全没有凋落物。当从雨林的阴暗林下和林中空地排除红蟹后,凋落物迅速增加到几乎完全覆盖,然后全年保持。叶片系留实验以及凋落物输入和现存作物的测量表明,红蟹垄断了凋落物处理,从森林地面清除了每年落叶量的39%至87%。在有陆地蟹存在的情况下,凋落物周转速率高出两倍多:林下排除地块的分解常数k为2.6,但在有蟹的情况下升至6.0。红蟹的生物量密度(114 g m)远高于其他地方报道的整个凋落物动物群落的密度。它们显著降低了其他凋落物无脊椎动物的丰度,但我们未检测到主要无脊椎动物类群(螨类、弹尾虫、肺螺类蜗牛、蚂蚁、啮虫目昆虫和蜘蛛)的相对频率有任何变化。无论何处杂食性陆地蟹数量众多,它们的活动在凋落物分解和调节养分循环速率方面可能至关重要。在垄断凋落物处理过程中,它们也可能是重要的物理“生态系统工程师”,将有机物和养分转移到土壤中,并减少其他动物的可用栖息地。