Abstract

Abstract. Excessive nutrient inputs and grazers can influence biomass and elemental composition of primary producers in freshwater ecosystems. How interactions between nutrient enrichment and grazing fish alter benthic habitats through effects on periphyton autotrophy, biomass, and elemental composition has been studied rarely. We compared the effects of grazing by central stonerollers (Campostoma anomalum) on autotrophic and total periphyton biomass, sediment mass, and C, N, and P stoichiometry of periphyton in 12 flow-through stream mesocosms randomly assigned to 1 of 3 different PO4-P concentrations (control: 8 µg/L, low: 20 µg/L, high: 100 µg/L). Fish grazing suppressed periphyton ash-free dry mass (AFDM) and sediment accumulation, regardless of P treatment. However, grazing also increased the proportion of algal biomass in the periphyton, evidenced by a reduction in benthic C:chlorophyll a on grazed substrates. The response of periphyton stoichiometry to experimental P enrichment was stronger on gra...

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