Nitrogen uptake in riparian plant communities across a sharp ecological boundary of salmon density
DD Mathewson, MD Hocking and TE Reimchen
Department of Biology, University of Victoria, PO Box 3020, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, V8W 3N5
BMC Ecology 2003,
3:4doi:10.1186/1472-6785-3-4
Abstract
Background
Recent studies of anadromous salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.) on
the Pacific Coast of North America indicate an important and previously
unrecognized role of salmonid nutrients to terrestrial biota. However,
the extent of this uptake by primary producers and consumers and the
influences on community structure remain poorly described. We examine
here the contribution of salmon nutrients to multiple taxa of riparian
vegetation (Blechnum spicant, Menziesii ferruginea, Oplopanax
horridus, Rubus spectabilis, Vaccinium alaskaense, V. parvifolium,
Tsuga heterophylla) and measure foliar δ15N,
total %N and plant community structure at two geographically separated
watersheds in coastal British Columbia. To reduce potentially
confounding effects of precipitation, substrate and other abiotic
variables, we made comparisons across a sharp ecological boundary of
salmon density that resulted from a waterfall barrier to salmon
migration.
Results
δ15N and %N in foliage, and %cover of soil nitrogen indicators differed across the waterfall barrier to salmon at each watershed. δ15N
values were enriched by 1.4‰ to 9.0‰ below the falls depending on
species and watershed, providing a relative contribution of
marine-derived nitrogen (MDN) to vegetation of 10% to 60%. %N in foliar
tissues was slightly higher below the falls, with the majority of
variance occurring between vegetation species. Community structure also
differed with higher incidence of nitrogen-rich soil indicator species
below the waterfalls.
Conclusions
Measures of δ15N, %N and
vegetation cover indicate a consistent difference in the riparian
community across a sharp ecological boundary of salmon density. The
additional N source that salmon provide to nitrogen-limited habitats
appears to have significant impacts on the N budget of riparian
vegetation, which may increase primary productivity, and result in
community shifts between sites with and without salmon access. This, in
turn, may have cascading ecosystem effects in forests adjacent to
salmon streams.