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Ecology, life history and reproduction

Mayfly communities in two Neotropical lowland forests

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Pages 311-318 | Received 20 Oct 2008, Accepted 13 Feb 2009, Published online: 24 Nov 2009
 

Abstract

In 2006, the Stroud Water Research Center conducted inventories of stream macroinvertebrates in the Peninsula de Osa in Costa Rica and the Madre de Dios watershed in eastern Peru. Both areas have extensive lowland tropical rainforests under threat from road development, tourism, poaching and gold mining. The mayfly communities of the two regions were substantially different in family relative abundances. In Osa the mayfly community was more or less evenly divided among Baetidae, Leptohyphidae, and Leptophlebiidae. In streams where one group was clearly dominant, this was most often Leptohyphidae. By contrast, in the Madre de Dios watershed Leptophlebiidae was often 75% or more of the mayfly fauna while Leptohyphidae was 20% or less. In both Osa and Madre de Dios, EPT indices were calculated for impacted streams and relatively undisturbed streams. However, physical characteristics such as stream size and substrate diversity were often a better predictor of community composition than human activity.

Acknowledgements

We thank Eida Fletes A. (INBio, Costa Rica) and Giancarlo Barbieri (Puerto Maldonado, Peru) for their help in the field. This project was funded by grants from the George and Betty Moore Foundation (Peru), the Blue Moon Foundation (Costa Rica), and in part by a grant (FLAX 02-03) from CSREES, USDA to Florida A&M University.

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