Published November 5, 2015 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Diversity of Riparian Plants among and within Species Shapes River Communities

  • 1. University of Chicago

Description

Organismal diversity among and within species may affect ecosystem function with effects transmitting across ecosystem boundaries. Whether recipient communities adjust their composition, in turn, to maximize their function in response to changes in donor composition at these two scales of diversity is unknown. We use small stream communities that rely on riparian subsidies as a model system. We used leaf pack experiments to ask how variation in plants growing beside streams in the Olympic Peninsula of Washington State, USA affects stream communities via leaf subsidies. Leaves from red alder (Alnus rubra), vine maple (Acer cinereus), bigleaf maple (Acer macrophyllum) and western hemlock (Tsuga heterophylla) were assembled in leaf packs to contrast low versus high diversity, and deployed in streams to compare local versus non-local leaf sources at the among and within species scales. Leaves from individuals within species decomposed at varying rates; most notably thin leaves decomposed rapidly. Among deciduous species, vine maple decomposed most rapidly, harbored the least algal abundance, and supported the greatest diversity of aquatic invertebrates, while bigleaf maple was at the opposite extreme for these three metrics. Recipient communities decomposed leaves from local species rapidly: leaves from early successional plants decomposed rapidly in stream reaches surrounded by early successional forest and leaves from later successional plants decomposed rapidly adjacent to later successional forest. The species diversity of leaves inconsistently affected decomposition, algal abundance and invertebrate metrics. Intraspecific diversity of leaf packs also did not affect decomposition or invertebrate diversity. However, locally sourced alder leaves decomposed more rapidly and harbored greater levels of algae than leaves sourced from conspecifics growing in other areas on the Olympic Peninsula, but did not harbor greater aquatic invertebrate diversity. In contrast to alder, local intraspecific differences via decomposition, algal or invertebrate metrics were not observed consistently among maples. These results emphasize that biodiversity of riparian subsidies at the within and across species scale have the potential to affect aquatic ecosystems, although there are complex species-specific effects.

Data availability

All relevant data are within the paper.

Files

journal.pone.0142362.pdf

Files (1.4 MB)

Name Size Download all
Article
md5:7ecaae299ee75b3b727f4ca7bdd32f83
1.4 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0142362
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:7483

Funding

U.S. National Science Foundation
Graduate Research Fellowship Program fellowship
University of Chicago
Hinds Fund grant
Achievement Rewards for College Scientists Foundation
Scholar Illinois Chapter
Unknown funder
Olympic National Resources Grant
U.S. National Science Foundation
DEB 09-19420

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Ecology and Evolution