Abstract

The floodplain has been viewed as a transitional system or ecotone between aquatic and terrestrial habitats. This research has evaluated the role of floodplain macroinvertebrates in the degradation of leaf litter in a Michigan woodland floodplain, and examined the interrelationships among floodplain-stream macroinvertebrates, microbial colonization and selected environmental factors. Although taxonomically different decomposer groups operate in both systems, their functional roles as leaf litter detritivores are basically the same. Leaf litter processing rates were compared and contrasted between the stream and adjacent floodplain using leaf packs and litter bags, respectively. In the stream, the major time period for detritus processing by invertebrates is in the fall and winter, while in the floodplain it is during the spring. Therefore, the sequence of events involved in processing are similar, yet the timing and rate of these events are strikingly different. An understanding of the significant ecological processes linking the stream and floodplain as complementary systems is discussed within the context of watershed management.

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