Abstract

The importance of algae in the diet of the oligochaetes Lumbriculus variegatus and Rhyacodrilus sodalis was determined from cellections made in a eutrophic bay from April 1977 to April 1978. During the summer, algae represented 70-85% of the gut contents of both species. The most frequently ingested algae were Cymatopleura elliptica, Cymbella spp., Epithemia turgida, Pinnularia spp., and Synedra ulna. Almost all species were consumed in proportion to their abundance in the environment. However, Nostoc pruniforme and Nostoc verrucosum were not eaten due to size selection. The high level of algal consumption exhibited by the oligochaetes was primarily related to the large standing crop of algae on the sediments. During the winter, when algal densities were low in the environment, detritus and associated bacteria were the major food source.

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