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Aresco, M. J. (2005). Ecological relationships of turtles in northern florida lakes: a study of omnivory and the structure of a lake food web. Unpublished thesis PhD, Florida State University. 
Added by: Admin (22 Feb 2009 11:56:06 UTC)   Last edited by: Beate Pfau (16 Aug 2009 08:51:06 UTC)
Resource type: Thesis/Dissertation
BibTeX citation key: Aresco2005b
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Categories: General
Keywords: Apalone, Apalone ferox, Emydidae, Ernährung = nutrition, Fressfeinde = predators, Habitat = habitat, Nordamerika = North America, Pseudemys, Pseudemys concinna, Schildkröten = turtles + tortoises, Trachemys, Trachemys scripta, Trionychidae
Creators: Aresco
Publisher: Florida State University
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Views index: 20%
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Abstract     
Lakes in the southeastern United States support a high diversity of reptiles and amphibians, including many species of turtles. Reptilian omnivores are abundant and their role in lake food webs must be important. In Leon County, Florida, I studied 17 lakes and the abundances of 3 species of turtles - yellow-bellied slider, Trachemys scripta, Florida cooter, Pseudemys floridana, and Florida softshell, Apalone ferox. I found that lakes in northern Florida range from low-nutrient, sand-bottom lakes to moderately eutrophic, muck-bottom lakes with abundant macrophytes, but one of the best predictors of turtle abundances was periphyton. Abundances of all three focal species were strongly correlated with a mud and muck substrate and both top-down (no alligator predation) and bottom-up (high periphyton productivity) factors. On a finer scale, abundances of the individual species were correlated with additional factors that may be related to trophic position: Trachemys scripta – high phosphorus and high chironomid abundance, Pseudemys floridana – low macrophyte cover and high chironomid abundance, and Apalone ferox – high macroinvertebrate abundance, high snail abundance, and high phosphorus. An experiment revealed that intraspecific competition may be more important than interspecific competition in partitioning resources between the omnivorous, T. scripta, and specialist algivore, P. floridana. In low resource environments, inefficient digestive physiology and intraspecific competition may limit density of an omnivore compared to that of a low trophic position specialist. Stable isotope analysis of the entire food web of Lake Jackson, Leon County, Florida, revealed that filamentous macroalgae were the foundation of the web despite the much greater biomass of macrophytes. The turtle assemblage consisted of one herbivore and five omnivores. The diets of the three focal species differed: P. floridana was a specialist algivore (trophic position = 2.3), T. scripta was a generalist omnivore (TP = 3.3), and A. ferox was an omnivore with some specialization on insects and snails (TP = 3.8). There were few specialists (TP ³ 4.0) and few strict primary consumers. Omnivory was prevalent (90% of consumers), and the food web is one trophic level shorter than those in fish-dominated, north temperate lake webs that have few turtles, less species diversity, and lower productivity.
Added by: Admin  Last edited by: Beate Pfau
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