Organic Seston Dynamics in Upland Neotropical Streams: Implications for Amphibian Declines

Scot Peterson, J. Checo Colón-Gaud, Matt R. Whiles, Meshagae Hunte-Brown, Scott Connelly, Susan S. Kilham, Catherine M. Pringle, Karen R. Lips, Roberto Brenes

Research output: Contribution to conferencePresentation

Abstract

Organic seston represents food for filter feeders and a mechanism for downstream transport of energy and nutrients. As part of a study assessing the ecological impacts of stream-breeding anuran extirpations, we examined seston dynamics in 2 stream reaches with tadpoles (El Cope) and 2 without (Fortuna) in the Panamanian uplands. All reaches are high gradient with annual average discharge ranging from 46-102 L/s. Samples were collected multiple times per month at various discharges, sieved into fine (<754μm, >98μm) and very fine (<98μm, >1.6μm) fractions, and processed to estimate ash-free dry mass (AFDM), total C, and total N. Average annual concentrations ranged from 0.52- 2.51 mg/L (fine) and 2.04-3.14 mg/L (very fine), and total export ranged from 0.27-7,981 mg/s across all streams. On average, very fine particles comprised 78% of export from El Cope sites and 61% from Fortuna streams. Average total N export ranged from 5.32-30.53 mg/s in El Cope sites and 1.71-6.04 mg/s at Fortuna. Average particle quality (C/N) in El Cope streams was higher (7.6) than Fortuna streams (11.5). Lower export of very fine particles and lower seston quality in Fortuna streams suggests the loss of tadpoles may influence seston dynamics and quality in these systems.
Original languageAmerican English
StatePublished - May 2005
EventNorth American Benthological Society Annual Meeting (NABS) - Santa Fe, NM
Duration: Jun 10 2010 → …

Conference

ConferenceNorth American Benthological Society Annual Meeting (NABS)
Period06/10/10 → …

Keywords

  • Amphibian declines
  • Organic seston dynamics
  • Upland neotropical streams

DC Disciplines

  • Biology

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Organic Seston Dynamics in Upland Neotropical Streams: Implications for Amphibian Declines'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this