1998
DOI: 10.1046/j.1461-0248.1998.00039.x
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Disturbance, resource supply, and food‐web architecture in streams

Abstract: We studied food webs comprising fish, macroinvertebrates, and algae (identified to species or morphospecies) in small streams using a consistent methodology at the same spatial and temporal scales. Our aim was to test a priori hypotheses derived from dynamic‐demographic and energetics models concerning the effects of disturbance and resource availability on food‐web attributes. The regime of bed disturbance affecting the organisms in the webs was measured in 10 streams. We also derived measures of the supply o… Show more

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Cited by 187 publications
(154 citation statements)
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References 35 publications
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“…In this context, there are clear questions that now can be addressed in food-web ecology. Describing how food web topology changes along environmental gradients such as eutrophication or physical disturbance [86,87] and over time in heavily impacted systems is the first step [75]. Linking these topological changes to changes in ecosystem functioning and the robustness of systems to further change is a major challenge.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this context, there are clear questions that now can be addressed in food-web ecology. Describing how food web topology changes along environmental gradients such as eutrophication or physical disturbance [86,87] and over time in heavily impacted systems is the first step [75]. Linking these topological changes to changes in ecosystem functioning and the robustness of systems to further change is a major challenge.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dunne et al, 2002a;Krause et al, 2003;Townsend et al, 1998) and not produced replicate food webs from the one system but with different levels of disturbance. Furthermore, quantified information on biomass fluxes was generated to gain a more balanced view of the role of particular species and links within the context of the network, rather than weighting each equally .…”
Section: P0420mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Menge and Sutherland, 1976); however, empirical tests of disturbance impacts on food chain length in streams have yielded contrasting results, reflecting different approaches, methodologies and focal disturbance regimes. Flood disturbances have reportedly increased (Marks et al, 2000), decreased (Parker and Huryn, 2006) or not affected (Townsend et al, 1998) food chain length in streams. Drought disturbance studies have been slower to emerge, revealing reductions in food chain length where dewatering occurs Sabo et al, 2010), or no change where flow reduction is less severe (Walters and Post, 2008).…”
Section: P0575mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We analysed nine published food webs: Caribbean [25], El Verde [31], Little Rock [32], Mill Stream (Ledger, Edwards & Woodward, unpublished data, see [11]), Stony Island [33], Tuesday Lake [34],Weddell Sea [35] and two versions of Ythan Estuary [36]. The difference between the two versions of the Ythan Estuary is that in the version from 1996 parasites are included, whereas in the 1991 version they are not.…”
Section: (A) Food Websmentioning
confidence: 99%