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Salamanders,
Headwater Streams Critical in Food Chain
Friday, February 22, 2008
MU study suggests
salamanders are "keystone" species
The
Spotted Salamander
(Ambystoma
maculatum)
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is
a mole salamander common in the eastern United States and
Canada.
University of Missouri
scientist Ray Semlitsch studies creatures most people don’t
ever see. These creatures are active only at night and thrive in
the shallow, cool, wet surroundings of headwater streams, an
oft-overlooked biological environment.
A collaborative study, with MU
graduate student Bill Peterman, recently published in the journal
Freshwater Biology, revealed the biomass (total mass of an
organism in an area) of the black-bellied salamander far exceeds
any previous estimates, and the contribution of the species and
its habitat may be critical in the food chain. While the
ecological role of the salamander is not fully understood,
radio-telemetry and mark-recapture tracking methods used in the
study indicate the salamanders are a critical component in the
productivity of headwater streams, possibly ensuring the survival
of other species of fauna.
“This is important
because it is the first study to uncover the hidden biomass of
these salamanders,” said Semlitsch, professor of biological
science in the MU College of Arts and Science. “Salamanders
typically live underground. They live in places most people don’t
see, and they live in these small, headwater streams where there
are no other fresh-water vertebrates. Fish can’t exist in
these small streams. This is where water seeps out of the rock,
where all streams begin life as a stream.”
These headwater streams,
according to the study, are very productive areas for salamanders
and Semlitsch advocates the protection of these ecosystems.
“The final ‘take-home’
message of our study is salamanders comprise a huge amount of
protein biomass for these headwater stream ecosystems,”
Semlitsch said. “We think that’s important because
that biomass can then be used by consumers, such as predators, or
could be used by decomposers in that system. The salamanders also
are consuming aquatic insects. They are a key link, we think, in
these headwater stream systems that has not been detected or
uncovered before.
“The amount of biomass
we’ve reported is much, much higher than has ever been
reported before, suggesting these headwater streams are very
important ecosystems and they deserve protection. In my view,
they actually deserve more protection than further down stream.
It seems logical to me to protect the water where it’s
coming out of the ground to retain and maintain clean water and
provide ecosystem services downstream.”
Semlitsch said the study brings
to light the critical importance of salamanders, creatures that
most people don’t know much about or ever see as compared
to birds or mammals.
Source:
University of Missouri

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