Abstract

Species distributions, and thus the composition of communities, are determined by many interacting biotic and abiotic factors. We analyzed the variation in composition of the invertebrate predator guild across eight small, steep coastal streams in eastern Canada, in relation to variation in several broad categories of environmental variables: disturbance-related physical characteristics, top-down effects (fish), and bottom-up effects (prey composition and productivity-related physical/chemical variables). Similarity in composition (relative and absolute abundances of the 19 species belonging to the Rhyacophilidae, Perlodidae, and Chloroperlidae) declined significantly with distance. Streams that were most similar in predator composition were also most similar in physical factors related to disturbance, but were not more similar in prey abundance/composition or in environmental factors associated with productivity (chemistry, canopy cover, and riparian forest type). Similarity in the relative abundance of species within the Rhyacophilidae was linked to variation in the presence/abundance of brook trout. These results suggest that the invertebrate predator guilds of these small coastal streams are structured first and foremost by factors associated with the magnitude and variability of the flow regime, and second by response to top-down factors (predation by brook trout). There was no evidence that bottom-up effects altered the composition or abundance of the predator guild.

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