Abstract

In temporary freshwater systems, the type of vegetation within a system can influence community structure. Vegetation not only provides physical structure, but can also contribute to changes in abundance and quality of food and in water quality through decomposition. An experiment was undertaken using natural and artificial vegetation in small mesocosms to examine the influence of the physical structure of vegetation on invertebrate community structure in terms of water quality, food abundance, and physical structure. It was predicted that invertebrate community structure would be identical in natural and artificial treatments if the effect of vegetative decomposition was negligible. Furthermore, invertebrate community structure in bare ground treatments would be identical to those with vegetation if the physical structure of vegetation has no significant effect. Five treatments were used: a bare ground control, artificial vegetation (×2), and natural vegetation treatments (grass, eucalypt leaf litter). Water quality, food abundance, and invertebrate abundance were examined after six weeks of inundation. All treatments had high water temperatures (34–40°C), and natural vegetation treatments had slightly higher conductivity (208–316 mS cm−1) and lower turbidity (40–231 NTU) than other treatments (47–156 mS cm−1 and 55–400 NTU, respectively). The physical structure of artificial vegetation did not significantly influence invertebrate community structure compared to the bare ground treatment, whereas treatments with decomposing natural vegetation had relatively low abundances of microcrustaceans (0–96 individuals/mesocosm) and relatively high abundances of chironomids (192–1576 individuals/mesocosm) compared to other treatments (>100 microcrustaceans/mesocosm if present, and <370 chironomids/mesocosm, respectively). This suggests that food availability had greater importance than physical structure in determining community structure in these small aquatic ecosystems.

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