Abstract

Tropical montane ecosystems of the Andes are critically threatened by a rapid land‐use change which can potentially affect stream variables, aquatic communities, and ecosystem processes such as leaf litter breakdown. However, these effects have not been sufficiently investigated in the Andean region and at high altitude locations in general. Here, we studied the influence of land use (forest–pasture–urban) on stream physico‐chemical variables (e.g., water temperature, nutrient concentration, and pH), aquatic communities (macroinvertebrates and aquatic fungi) and leaf litter breakdown rates in Andean streams (southern Ecuador), and how variation in those stream physico‐chemical variables affect macroinvertebrates and fungi related to leaf litter breakdown. We found that pH, water temperature, and nutrient concentration increased along the land‐use gradient. Macroinvertebrate communities were significantly different between land uses. Shredder richness and abundance were lower in pasture than forest sites and totally absent in urban sites, and fungal richness and biomass were higher in forest sites than in pasture and urban sites. Leaf litter breakdown rates became slower as riparian land use changed from natural to anthropogenically disturbed conditions and were largely determined by pH, water temperature, phosphate concentration, fungal activity, and single species of leaf‐shredding invertebrates. Our findings provide evidence that leaf litter breakdown in Andean streams is sensitive to riparian land‐use change, with urban streams being the most affected. In addition, this study highlights the role of fungal biomass and shredder species (Phylloicus; Trichoptera and Anchytarsus; Coleoptera) on leaf litter breakdown in Andean streams and the contribution of aquatic fungi in supporting this ecosystem process when shredders are absent or present low abundance in streams affected by urbanization. Finally, we summarize important implications in terms of managing of native vegetation and riparian buffers to promote ecological integrity and functioning of tropical Andean stream ecosystems.

Highlights

  • Changes in the structure and functioning of stream ecosystems are closely related to riparian vegetation and land uses (Allan 2004)

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

  • We found that (1) land use affects stream physico-chemical variables, for example, increasing nutrient concentration or water temperature; (2) macroinvertebrate and fungal abundance and richness are affected by current velocity, pH, water temperature, and phosphate concentration; (3) leaf litter breakdown is different between land uses, and breakdown rates became slower as riparian land-use changes from forest to pasture to urban; and (4) leaf litter breakdown responds to pH, water temperature, phosphate concentration, fungal biomass, and the abundance of single species of leaf-shredding invertebrates (Phylloicus; Trichoptera and Anchytarsus; Coleoptera)

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Summary

Introduction

Changes in the structure and functioning of stream ecosystems are closely related to riparian vegetation and land uses (Allan 2004). The principal mechanisms by which land use influences stream variables controlling aquatic communities closely related to ecosystem processes such as leaf litter breakdown have been well studied in temperate streams (e.g., Danger and Robson 2004; Paul et al 2006; McKie and Malmqvist 2009; Young and Collier 2009; Hladyz et al 2011) and in some lowland tropical streams (e.g., Silva-Junior and Moulton 2011). The conversion of forest to pasture or urbanization can alter stream flow and pH, increase water temperature and nutrient concentrations, and reduce invertebrate densities (Paul and Meyer 2001; Allan 2004).

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