Hydrobiologia · 2006

Nutrient limitation in detritus-based microcosms in Sarracenia purpurea

Gray S.M., Miller T.E., Mouquet N., Daufresne T.

doi.org/10.1007/s10750-006-0265-2
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Key Message

We investigated the effects of specific nutrients (carbon, phosphorus, and nitrogen), as well as a top predator (the mosquito Wyeomyia smithii), on the structure of the detritivore community found in the water-filled leaves of the pitcher plant Sarracenia purpurea. The concentrations of three nutrients and the presence of the predators were manipulated in a factorial design, while the response of the remaining community was quantified.

Bacterial growth was found to be strongly carbon-limited and somewhat less limited by phosphorus and there was an interaction between the effects of the two nutrients. Neither carbon or phosphorus addition affected protozoan or rotifer abundance, and nitrogen had only a minor effect.

The presence of the predator, however, significantly reduced the abundance of the four numerically dominant bacteriovores. There were no interactions between top-down and bottom-up effects; the strong direct reciprocal effects between adjacent trophic levels seem to be greatly attenuated as they are propagated farther up or down the food chain.

Figure from Gray et al. 2006
The pitcher plant Sarracenia purpurea in the field. Photo by Nicolas Mouquet at Sumatra Savannah in the Apalachicola National Forest (USA).
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