Abstract

Summary1. Shrimps are abundant in many tropical coastal streams. Studies in Central America and the Caribbean have demonstrated the importance of shrimps in removing sediments and altering the composition of the benthos. Previous work in our study area showed that ephemeropterans and not shrimps were important in removing benthic material.2. Here we used an experimental exclusion to test the hypothesis that shrimps exert strong influence on sediment dynamics with direct and indirect effects on the benthic algal and faunal community at a site where they are the predominant element of macrofauna. We used electricity to exclude Macrobrachium olfersi and Potimirim glabra from small quadrats (0.135 m2) for 34 days in a stream located at Ilha Grande, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil. We analysed benthic sediment dynamics and community colonisation during this period on artificial substrates in electrified and not‐electrified quadrats.3. Significantly higher sediment accrual had occurred in the electrified treatment after 14 days and persisted for the 34‐day course of the experiment; substrates protected from shrimps contained about four times as much ash‐free dry mass (AFDM) as those of the controls. After 34 days, significantly more pennate diatoms were present in the exclusion treatment, but chlorophyll was not significantly different between treatments. Densities of baetid ephemeropteran nymphs were significantly higher in the presence of shrimps.4. We attribute all these effects to the atyid P. glabra, the more abundant and active shrimp observed in the control treatment. Our results suggest that atyid shrimps played an important role related to sediment removal on hard substrate by direct ingestion and ‘bioturbation’. They reduced certain components of the periphyton (pennate diatoms) without affecting primary production (chlorophyll a). The activity of these shrimps on periphyton affected also faunal components such as baetid ephemeropterans and seems to determine the composition of the benthic community.

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