Stability vs. organization potential of a trophic model for the management of shallow tropical streams

Streams in the Hondo River basin (Mexico-Belize) face ecological disturbances caused by use of fertilizers and pesticides, as well as invasion by exotic species. These threats can affect ecosystem functioning, with loss of biotic integrity. Mass-balance trophic models were developed to quantify the energy flow and assess the maturity and health states for three locations in the basin, in two seasons. Quantitative sampling was carried out for plankton, fish, macrobenthos, insects, benthic autotrophs, detritus, and exported organic matter. Field sampling was supplemented with a literature review to define functional groups and their diets. Results showed that more than 50% of the energy flow originated from detritus, which suggests that the systems are bottom-up controlled. Low values of energy transfer efficiency, connectivity, omnivory, recycling, mean path length, and ascendency suggest that the freshwater bodies in this basin are oligotrophic, but they are not in a good health and thus have low stability and are susceptible to disturbance, despite the fact that they also have a high number of specialized functional groups, indicative of a well-organized food web, supposed to be representative of healthy ecosystems. The potential of these models to manage shallow tropical streams is discussed.

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Main Authors: Ruiz Cauich, Lissie Edith Maestra autora 12928, Schmitter Soto, Juan Jacobo Doctor autor 2049, Barba Macías, Everardo Doctor autor 2025, González Solís, David Doctor autor 2045
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Contaminación de ríos, Intercambio de energía, Grupo funcional, Salud de los ecosistemas, Disturbio ecológico, Artfrosur,
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352249615200109
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:26562024-04-26T11:26:29ZStability vs. organization potential of a trophic model for the management of shallow tropical streams Ruiz Cauich, Lissie Edith Maestra autora 12928 Schmitter Soto, Juan Jacobo Doctor autor 2049 Barba Macías, Everardo Doctor autor 2025 González Solís, David Doctor autor 2045 textengStreams in the Hondo River basin (Mexico-Belize) face ecological disturbances caused by use of fertilizers and pesticides, as well as invasion by exotic species. These threats can affect ecosystem functioning, with loss of biotic integrity. Mass-balance trophic models were developed to quantify the energy flow and assess the maturity and health states for three locations in the basin, in two seasons. Quantitative sampling was carried out for plankton, fish, macrobenthos, insects, benthic autotrophs, detritus, and exported organic matter. Field sampling was supplemented with a literature review to define functional groups and their diets. Results showed that more than 50% of the energy flow originated from detritus, which suggests that the systems are bottom-up controlled. Low values of energy transfer efficiency, connectivity, omnivory, recycling, mean path length, and ascendency suggest that the freshwater bodies in this basin are oligotrophic, but they are not in a good health and thus have low stability and are susceptible to disturbance, despite the fact that they also have a high number of specialized functional groups, indicative of a well-organized food web, supposed to be representative of healthy ecosystems. The potential of these models to manage shallow tropical streams is discussed.Streams in the Hondo River basin (Mexico-Belize) face ecological disturbances caused by use of fertilizers and pesticides, as well as invasion by exotic species. These threats can affect ecosystem functioning, with loss of biotic integrity. Mass-balance trophic models were developed to quantify the energy flow and assess the maturity and health states for three locations in the basin, in two seasons. Quantitative sampling was carried out for plankton, fish, macrobenthos, insects, benthic autotrophs, detritus, and exported organic matter. Field sampling was supplemented with a literature review to define functional groups and their diets. Results showed that more than 50% of the energy flow originated from detritus, which suggests that the systems are bottom-up controlled. Low values of energy transfer efficiency, connectivity, omnivory, recycling, mean path length, and ascendency suggest that the freshwater bodies in this basin are oligotrophic, but they are not in a good health and thus have low stability and are susceptible to disturbance, despite the fact that they also have a high number of specialized functional groups, indicative of a well-organized food web, supposed to be representative of healthy ecosystems. The potential of these models to manage shallow tropical streams is discussed.Contaminación de ríosIntercambio de energíaGrupo funcionalSalud de los ecosistemasDisturbio ecológicoArtfrosurFood Webshttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352249615200109Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Contaminación de ríos
Intercambio de energía
Grupo funcional
Salud de los ecosistemas
Disturbio ecológico
Artfrosur
Contaminación de ríos
Intercambio de energía
Grupo funcional
Salud de los ecosistemas
Disturbio ecológico
Artfrosur
spellingShingle Contaminación de ríos
Intercambio de energía
Grupo funcional
Salud de los ecosistemas
Disturbio ecológico
Artfrosur
Contaminación de ríos
Intercambio de energía
Grupo funcional
Salud de los ecosistemas
Disturbio ecológico
Artfrosur
Ruiz Cauich, Lissie Edith Maestra autora 12928
Schmitter Soto, Juan Jacobo Doctor autor 2049
Barba Macías, Everardo Doctor autor 2025
González Solís, David Doctor autor 2045
Stability vs. organization potential of a trophic model for the management of shallow tropical streams
description Streams in the Hondo River basin (Mexico-Belize) face ecological disturbances caused by use of fertilizers and pesticides, as well as invasion by exotic species. These threats can affect ecosystem functioning, with loss of biotic integrity. Mass-balance trophic models were developed to quantify the energy flow and assess the maturity and health states for three locations in the basin, in two seasons. Quantitative sampling was carried out for plankton, fish, macrobenthos, insects, benthic autotrophs, detritus, and exported organic matter. Field sampling was supplemented with a literature review to define functional groups and their diets. Results showed that more than 50% of the energy flow originated from detritus, which suggests that the systems are bottom-up controlled. Low values of energy transfer efficiency, connectivity, omnivory, recycling, mean path length, and ascendency suggest that the freshwater bodies in this basin are oligotrophic, but they are not in a good health and thus have low stability and are susceptible to disturbance, despite the fact that they also have a high number of specialized functional groups, indicative of a well-organized food web, supposed to be representative of healthy ecosystems. The potential of these models to manage shallow tropical streams is discussed.
format Texto
topic_facet Contaminación de ríos
Intercambio de energía
Grupo funcional
Salud de los ecosistemas
Disturbio ecológico
Artfrosur
author Ruiz Cauich, Lissie Edith Maestra autora 12928
Schmitter Soto, Juan Jacobo Doctor autor 2049
Barba Macías, Everardo Doctor autor 2025
González Solís, David Doctor autor 2045
author_facet Ruiz Cauich, Lissie Edith Maestra autora 12928
Schmitter Soto, Juan Jacobo Doctor autor 2049
Barba Macías, Everardo Doctor autor 2025
González Solís, David Doctor autor 2045
author_sort Ruiz Cauich, Lissie Edith Maestra autora 12928
title Stability vs. organization potential of a trophic model for the management of shallow tropical streams
title_short Stability vs. organization potential of a trophic model for the management of shallow tropical streams
title_full Stability vs. organization potential of a trophic model for the management of shallow tropical streams
title_fullStr Stability vs. organization potential of a trophic model for the management of shallow tropical streams
title_full_unstemmed Stability vs. organization potential of a trophic model for the management of shallow tropical streams
title_sort stability vs. organization potential of a trophic model for the management of shallow tropical streams
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352249615200109
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