Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, 06511, USA.
Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies, Millbrook, New York, 12545, USA.
Ecology. 2018 Nov;99(11):2558-2574. doi: 10.1002/ecy.2509. Epub 2018 Oct 8.
Animals can be important vectors for the movement of resources across ecosystem boundaries. Animals add resources to ecosystems primarily through egestion, excretion, and carcasses, and the stoichiometry and bioavailability of these inputs likely interact with characteristics of the recipient ecosystem to determine their effects on ecosystem function. We studied the influence of hippopotamus excretion/egestion and wildebeest carcasses, and their interactions with discharge, in the Mara River, Kenya. We measured nutrient dissolution and decomposition rates of wildlife inputs, the influence of inputs on nutrient concentrations and nutrient limitation in the river and the influence of inputs on biofilm growth and function in both experimental streams and along a gradient of inputs in the river. We found that hippopotamus excretion/egestion increases ammonium and coarse particulate organic matter in the river, and wildebeest carcasses increase ammonium, soluble reactive phosphorus, and total phosphorus. Concentrations of dissolved carbon and nutrients in the water column increased along a gradient of wildlife inputs and during low discharge, although concentrations of particulate carbon decreased during low discharge due to deposition on the river bottom. Autotrophs were nitrogen limited and heterotrophs were carbon limited and nitrogen and phosphorus colimited upstream of animal inputs but there was no nutrient limitation downstream of inputs. In experimental streams, hippo and wildebeest inputs together increased biofilm gross primary production (GPP) and respiration (R). These results differed in the river, where low concentrations of hippo inputs increased gross primary production (GPP) and respiration (R) of biofilms, but high concentrations of hippo inputs in conjunction with wildebeest inputs decreased GPP. Our research shows that inputs from large wildlife alleviate nutrient limitation and stimulate ecosystem metabolism in the Mara River and that the extent to which these inputs subsidize the ecosystem is mediated by the quantity and quality of inputs and discharge of the river ecosystem. Thus, animal inputs provide an important ecological subsidy to this river, and animal inputs were likely important in many other rivers prior to the widespread extirpation of large wildlife.
动物可以成为跨越生态系统边界的资源流动的重要载体。动物主要通过排遗、排泄和尸体向生态系统添加资源,这些输入的化学计量和生物可利用性可能与受纳生态系统的特征相互作用,从而决定它们对生态系统功能的影响。我们研究了河马排泄/排遗和角马尸体,以及它们与流量的相互作用,在肯尼亚的马拉河。我们测量了野生动物输入的养分溶解和分解率,以及输入对河流中养分浓度和养分限制的影响,以及输入对实验溪流和河流中输入梯度上生物膜生长和功能的影响。我们发现,河马的排泄/排遗增加了河流中的氨和粗颗粒有机物,而角马的尸体增加了氨、可溶性反应磷和总磷。水柱中溶解碳和养分的浓度随着野生动物输入的梯度和低流量而增加,尽管由于沉积在河底,颗粒碳的浓度在低流量期间下降。自养生物受到氮限制,异养生物受到碳限制和氮磷共同限制,在动物输入的上游,但在输入的下游没有营养限制。在实验溪流中,河马和角马的共同输入增加了生物膜的总初级生产力(GPP)和呼吸(R)。在河流中,结果有所不同,低浓度的河马输入增加了生物膜的总初级生产力(GPP)和呼吸(R),但高浓度的河马输入与角马输入相结合则降低了 GPP。我们的研究表明,来自大型野生动物的输入缓解了马拉河的营养限制,并刺激了生态系统代谢,而这些输入对生态系统的补贴程度受到输入的数量和质量以及河流生态系统流量的调节。因此,动物输入为这条河流提供了重要的生态补贴,并且在大型野生动物广泛灭绝之前,动物输入可能对许多其他河流很重要。