Abstract

Functional classification of animals is necessary to enhance the predictive power of food web models. However, while there is a large database for functional classification of benthic invertebrates (Functional Feeding Groups, FFG) in the temperate zone, the attribution of individual species of riverine invertebrates is still in its infancies in the Neotropical Region. Different authors hypothesized that diet breadth was larger in the Tropics, however detailed analysis are scarce. In the present study we aimed at classifying dominant benthic taxa of the Middle Parana River floodplain (Argentina) into trophic guilds by diet and niche overlap analyses. We sampled twelve taxa of benthic invertebrates from a floodplain lake during low water season and performed a gut content analysis as a baseline for FFG classification. We also used available diet information of other common taxa for statistical analysis. Then, we compared the variance of niche overlap, using Pianka's index, with that of simulated null model. After that we grouped taxa using Morisita similarity index with a threshold of 0.6 and compared niche overlap with null models within and between FFGs. Observed variance of niche overlap was greater than expected by chance, confirming the presence of FFGs among analyzed taxa. Considering trophic similarity of species, we identified four FFGs: collectors, omnivores, herbivores and predators. Niche overlap was greater than expected by stochastic null models within FFGs, and smaller between FFGs. Nearly one third of analyzed taxa were classified in a different FFG than their congeners of the Holarctic region. This result indicates that classifications performed in the Holarctic region should be used with care in the Neotropical region, even in subtropical systems

Highlights

  • Trophic interactions reveal important properties of ecosystems (Elton, 1927; Lindeman, 1942; Odum, 1957)

  • P. canaliculata presented a great dominance of vegetal tissues in its diet, detritus, algae and even animal tissues were registered as ingested items for this species

  • The present study provides a functional classification for some abundant benthic invertebrate taxa in a floodplain lake of the Middle Paraná River

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Summary

Introduction

Trophic interactions reveal important properties of ecosystems (Elton, 1927; Lindeman, 1942; Odum, 1957). Functional classification of species into trophic groups has been based mainly on morpho-behavioral similarities in the food acquisition modes This proved useful, and is widely used in freshwater ecosystems (Cummins, 1973; Cummins & Klug, 1979; Cummins & Minshall, 1995; Cummins et al., 2005). Simulation algorithms have been developed to compare observed patterns of resource use with null models, thereby providing an objective quantitative criterion to assess niche overlap between species (Gotelli & Graves, 1996) Another shortcoming when constructing useful food web models is that most of the current ideas of trophic ecology have been developed in a limited latitudinal range (mainly North America and Europe). Most of the studies have been developed in first orders rivers, while functional feeding groups in floodplain systems are scarcely studied

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