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Non-indigenous bamboo along headwater streams of the Luquillo Mountains, Puerto Rico: leaf fall, aquatic leaf decay and patterns of invasion

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 November 2000

Paul J. O'connor
Affiliation:
Department of Fishery and Wildlife Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523, USA National Park of American Samoa, Pago Pago, American Samoa 96799, USA.
Alan P. Covich
Affiliation:
Department of Fishery and Wildlife Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523, USA
F. N. Scatena
Affiliation:
USDA Forest Service International Institute for Tropical Forestry (IITF), P.O. Box 25000, Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico 00928, USA
Lloyd L. Loope
Affiliation:
USGS Biological Resources Division, Haleakalā Field Station, P.O. Box 369, Makawao, HI 96768, USA

Abstract

The introduction of bamboo to montane rain forests of the Luquillo Mountains, Puerto Rico in the 1930s and 1940s has led to present-day bamboo monocultures in numerous riparian areas. When a non-native species invades a riparian ecosystem, in-stream detritivores can be affected. Bamboo dynamics expected to influence stream communities in the Luquillo Experimental Forest (LEF) were examined. Based on current distributions, bamboo has spread downstream at a rate of 8 m y−1. Mean growth rate of bamboo culms was 15.3 cm d−1. Leaf fall from bamboo stands exceeded that of native mixed-species forest by c. 30% over a 10-mo study. Bamboo leaves (k = −0.021), and leaves from another abundant riparian exotic, Syzygium jambos (Myrtaceae) (k = −0.018), decayed at relatively slow rates when submerged in streams in fine-mesh bags which excluded macro-invertebrate leaf processors. In a second study, with leaf processors present, bamboo decay rates remained unchanged (k = −0.021), while decay rates of S. jambos increased (k = −0.037). Elemental losses from bamboo leaves in streams were rapid, further suggesting a change in riparian zone / stream dynamics following bamboo invasion. As non-indigenous bamboos spread along Puerto Rico streams, they are likely to alter aquatic communities dependent on leaf input.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2000 Cambridge University Press

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