2017
DOI: 10.1086/694905
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Flooding drives a macroinvertebrate biomass boom in ephemeral floodplain wetlands

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Cited by 31 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…Water chemistry was affected by an increase in six variables, including the nutrient TN and a decrease in the nutrient SRP. Our observed increase in TN may be associated with its release from terrestrial litter accumulation over time (Baldwin & Mitchell, 2000;McInerney et al, 2017). An increase in TP may not have been documented here as SRP decreased presumably by uptake from aquatic plants.…”
Section: Relationships Between Time Since Connection and Water Chemismentioning
confidence: 77%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Water chemistry was affected by an increase in six variables, including the nutrient TN and a decrease in the nutrient SRP. Our observed increase in TN may be associated with its release from terrestrial litter accumulation over time (Baldwin & Mitchell, 2000;McInerney et al, 2017). An increase in TP may not have been documented here as SRP decreased presumably by uptake from aquatic plants.…”
Section: Relationships Between Time Since Connection and Water Chemismentioning
confidence: 77%
“…Following inundation of dry oodplain wetlands nutrients are released from sediments stimulating primary and secondary production (Lake et al, 2006;McInerney et al, 2017). Invertebrates occupy an important role in oodplain wetlands linking aquatic and terrestrial carbon sources and nutrients to higher trophic levels such as sh and waterbirds (Boon & Shiel, 1990;Lindholm & Hessen, 2007).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Conceptual diagram synthesizing mechanisms by which floodplains may influence essential nutrient dynamics in riverine food webs: (1) Initial flood pulse and floodplain connectivity—liberation of DOC from terrestrial litter and nutrient release from floodplain sediments (e.g., McInerney et al 2017). (2) Disconnection—DOC and nutrients drive microbial activity in floodplain habitats, including synthesis of essential nutrients by algae and bacteria.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We expected that planktonic organic matter sources in the water column (i.e., seston) would be a dynamically controlling basal food resource for aquatic animals (Hladyz et al 2012). In light of inundation responses of aquatic invertebrates (e.g., increased biomass—McInerney et al 2017) and fish (e.g., increased recruitment and body condition—Beesley 2012) inhabiting floodplains, we hypothesized that wetland and anabranch habitats would sustain higher concentrations of dissolved organic carbon (leached from floodplain litter) and planktonic algae within the water column than river habitats. Subsequently, we expected that wetland and anabranch seston would supply higher concentrations of essential fatty acids for animals than seston in the river channel.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given this general shift in diet, growth of larger adult Murray cod may increase most during years that coincide with high rates of production of forage fishes and larger crustaceans. In river‐floodplain systems, such years are usually characterized by a flood pulse of some magnitude, whereupon rewetting of habitats higher in the riverscape results in pulses of energy through the food web (Balcombe & Arthington, 2009; Bayley, 1991; Benke, 2001; McInerney et al., 2017; Winemiller, 2004).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%