Published January 19, 2021 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Riparian hunting spiders do not rely on aquatic subsidies from intermittent alpine streams

  • 1. La Trobe University
  • 2. Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

Description

Drying in alpine streams might decrease aquatic-terrestrial trophic linkages by reducing terrestrial predation on aquatic prey. We tested this hypothesis by investigating whether a common riparian predator (hunting spiders) in alpine environments assimilated a lower proportion of aquatic prey with increasing stream intermittency. We used high temporal-resolution data from electrical resistance sensors to map patterns of naturally-occurring flow intermittency across 30 headwater streams of Val Roseg, a glacierized catchment in the Swiss Alps. We collected riparian hunting spiders, as well as potential terrestrial and aquatic macroinvertebrate prey, from streams and their associated riparian zones across two seasons (Alpine spring and summer). We estimated aquatic contributions to spider diets (pA) using (i) a gradient approach with aquatic invertebrate and spider carbon stable isotope ratio values (δ13C), and (ii) Bayesian carbon and nitrogen (δ15N) isotope mixing models. Spider pA from the gradient method were not statistically different from zero in spring (0.08 ± 0.10) and low in summer (0.16 ± 0.04). Mixing models also estimated low dependence on aquatic prey in both seasons, although with potentially higher contributions in summer. Spider diet did not vary with increasing flow intermittency in either season. Our results suggested that alpine hunting spiders obtain most of their carbon from terrestrial prey. The slight increase in spider pA during summer may correlate with peak emergence periods for aquatic insects, indicating opportunistic feeding by this riparian predator.

Notes

A ReadMe file (.txt) is included with metadata including descriptions of all data files, descriptions of variables, data formats, and units. Methods for data analysis can be found in the associated publication (Siebers et al. 2021).

Funding provided by: Ernst Göhner Stiftung
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100010801
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Funding provided by: Gelbert Foundation*
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Funding provided by: Canton Graubünden*
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Funding provided by: Eawag Discretionary Funds for Research*
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Funding provided by: Gelbert Foundation
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Funding provided by: Canton Graubünden
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Funding provided by: Eawag Discretionary Funds for Research
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