

Author: Barbee Nicole
Publisher: Springer Publishing Company
ISSN: 0018-8158
Source: Hydrobiologia, Vol.532, Iss.1-3, 2005-01, pp. : 153-165
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Abstract
Herbivorous insects have received relatively little attention in studies of consumer resource interactions in tropical compared to temperate streams. In this study I examined the effects of small, highly mobile, herbivorous insects on epilithic algae in riffle habitats of a stream located on the Pacific coast of Costa Rica. By elevating artificial substrates 20–30 cm off the streambed, while holding other abiotic factors constant, I successfully reduced the densities of grazing insects (primarily mayflies and dipterans) throughout an 8 week experimental period. This manipulation resulted in approximately 30% more algal biomass (measured as AFDM and chlorophyll
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