Abstract

A key attribute of riverine food webs is the downstream movement of invertebrates via the water column, or invertebrate drift. Causes of drift include benthic predation, food limitation, and perhaps passive entry, which may occur when invertebrates lose their purchase on stream substrate. However, the relative importance of drift causes is unknown, as is whether the relative importance of drift causes varies across space. Combining observational data on invertebrate herbivore and predator guild densities with in‐stream experiments, we evaluated the relative importance of benthic predation, food limitation, and passive entry as proximate causes of drift for the herbivore guild across the canopy gradient of a montane stream. We found that 1) benthic predation and food limitation were both more important as causes of herbivore drift than passive entry; 2) drift caused by food limitation did not vary with riparian canopy, whereas herbivore density decreased with increasing riparian canopy, and 3) per capita drift increased linearly with increasing density, while per capita drift decreased in a negative hyperbolic fashion with increasing food, indicating that herbivore drift is proportional to herbivore density, and inversely proportional to food. We conclude that invertebrate herbivore drift was overwhelmingly an active process to improve fitness, and that herbivore food did not vary across the canopy gradient, likely because increased herbivory from larger herbivore populations at sunnier sites prevented food from accumulating.

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