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Leaf-litter processing by invertebrates in a mangrove forest in Queensland
Authors:J C Camilleri
Institution:(1) Division of Science and Technology, Griffith University, 4215 Southport, Queensland, Australia;(2) Present address: Faculty of Built Environment and Engineering, Queensland University of Technology, GPO Box 2434 Brisbane, Queensland, 4001, Australia
Abstract:The way leaf shredders handle and shred leaves under laboratory conditions and in the mangrove forest at Myora Springs, Queensland, Australia, was investigated during the period 1980 to 1984. Field observations on the behaviour of the crab Sesarma erythrodactyla during low tide revealed that this species spends most of its time foraging over mud. S. erythrodactyla eats mangrove leaves where they fall or drags them into burrows or hollow logs. Through their feeding activities, crabs (S. erythrodactyla, Metopograpsus frontalis, Helice leachii, Clistocoeloma merguiensis, Leptograpsus variegatus, Paragrapsus laevis, Ilyograpsus paludicula), isopods (Exospaeroma alata, Campaecopia sp.) amphipods (Orchestia sp., Melita sp.), and a capitellid polychaete (Capitellides sp.), break down whole mangrove leaves into small particles. The way in which a leaf is broken down by leaf-shredders influences the size and composition of the particulate organic matter (POM) in the environment. The POM egested by leaf-shredders varies from 32 to 1171 mgrm. POM in this size range occurs in the guts of 38 invertebrate species which feed on mud, suggesting that they depend on the plant detritus produced by leafshredders as a source of food. Leaf-shredders therefore constitute a primary link in the marine food web of mangrove forests.
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