The relative importance of riparian shading and nutrients on algal production in subtropical streams.

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Mosisch, TD
Bunn, SE
Davies, PM
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Prof Alan G Hildrew and Prof Colin R Townsend

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2001
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Abstract
  1. We used artificial substrata in forested and open streams in South-East Queensland, Australia, to determine the relative importance of shading from riparian vegetation and of nutrients on periphyton growth, and whether nitrogen and/or phosphorus limited algal productivity. 2. Nutrient-diffusing substrata consisting of agar enriched with N, P and N + P, and controls without nutrients, were deployed in duplicate at 15 sites in headwater streams with riparian canopy cover ranging from 0 to 88%. 3. Shading was the over-riding factor controlling periphyton biomass accrual on the artificial substrata, with nutrients playing a relatively minor role. Microscopic examination of periphyton scrapings taken after 7 weeks revealed that diatoms dominated on the artificial substrata in shaded streams, whereas filamentous green algae dominated the algal assemblage in the more open canopy streams. 4. Whilst nutrients had little effect on the accrual of algal biomass compared with riparian shading, there was evidence that nitrogen, and not phosphorus, stimulated periphyton production in streams with sufficient light.
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Freshwater Biology

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46

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© 2001 Blackwell Publishing. The definitive version is available at [www.blackwell-synergy.com.]

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Environmental sciences

Biological sciences

History, heritage and archaeology

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