1983
DOI: 10.2307/1942585
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Interbiome Comparison of Stream Ecosystem Dynamics

Abstract: Studies were conducted in four distinct geographic areas (biomes/sites) in northern United States to examine changes in key ecosystem parameter: benthic organic matter (BOM), transported organic matter (TOM), community production and respiration, leaf pack decomposition, and functional feeding—group composition along gradients of increasing stream size. Four stations ranging from headwaters (1st or 2nd order) to midsized rivers (5th to 7th order) were examined at each site using comparable methods. The results… Show more

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Cited by 598 publications
(431 citation statements)
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“…Decomposition of plant litter by microbes and physical abrasion generates food for local aquatic consumers and also facilitates the transfer of energy and nutrients from upstream to downstream reaches within a river network (11). We measured breakdown rates of Bt and non-Bt corn litter to determine whether the Bt ␦-endotoxin influences rates of organic matter processing in our study streams.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Decomposition of plant litter by microbes and physical abrasion generates food for local aquatic consumers and also facilitates the transfer of energy and nutrients from upstream to downstream reaches within a river network (11). We measured breakdown rates of Bt and non-Bt corn litter to determine whether the Bt ␦-endotoxin influences rates of organic matter processing in our study streams.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some divergence from the stream continuum predictions have been documented (Winterbourn et al 1981 ). For example, the shift from heterotrophy to autotrophy changes geographically (2nd-3rd order streams in the northwest vs. 4th or 5th order in the northeast: Minshall et al 1983). Cummins et al…”
Section: The Future Of Biological Monitoringmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In forested streams where light is a limiting factor for primary production, energy sources are mainly allochthonous (leaf litter), the metabolic processes being typically heterotrophic (Fisher & Likens 1973, Minshall et al 1983. In Mediterranean systems, the greatest input of plant material occurs in autumn, thereby providing the potential for decomposition processes.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%