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Aquatic invertebrate ecology during a simulated botulism epizootic in a Sacramento Valley wetland

January 1, 1997

We investigated the effect of decomposing duck carcasses on aquatic invertebrate numbers, biomass, and taxonomic composition in a seasonally flooded, impounded wetland in the Sacramento Valley, California during August–November 1988 and 1989. Major invertebrate taxa were copepods (Cyclopoida, occurred in 8.3% of samples), water fleas (Daphnidae, 8.9%), water boatmen (Corisella, 10.4%), and midge larvae (Goeldichironomus, 9.3%;Chironomus, 11.5%;Tanypus, 17.2%). We found no treatment (carcass present or no carcass) by sampling day interaction for these taxa. We found a significant difference between sample plots with carcasses and those without carcasses only for Daphnidae counts andCorisella wet weights. We found significant differences among sampling days for these taxa that were probably statistical artifacts. We were unable to detect any effect of duck carcasses on aquatic invertebrate community structure and the potential availability of invertebrates as waterfowl food.

Publication Year 1997
Title Aquatic invertebrate ecology during a simulated botulism epizootic in a Sacramento Valley wetland
DOI 10.1007/BF03160727
Authors Jane M. Hicks, Ned H. Euliss, Stanley W. Harris
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Wetlands
Index ID 1001131
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center