Sunday, 23 March 2025

Knee deep in Malacostraca

Gammarus pulex/fossarum agg

This week I have been mostly thinking about Malacostraca, specifically Amphipods - "different feet" - referring to the different types of legs they have, some for eating and some for swimming. Amphipods are highly important invertebrates - primary decomposers which carry out the bulk of shredding of vegetation such as dead leaves, speeding up nutrient cycling by other organisms. The most commonly encountered Amphipod is Gammarus pulex/fossarum agg., which is in fact a species complex of many cryptic species distinguishable only by DNA analysis (Continental-scale patterns of hyper-cryptic diversity within the freshwater model taxon Gammarus fossarum (Crustacea, Amphipoda). (2020) Scientific reports, 10(1), 16536). 

I find Gammarus pulex/fossarum agg. pretty much everywhere I look, and around here that means fairly degraded aquatic environments. Urban rivers are some of the most anthropogenically modified landscapes on Earth, resulting in characteristic low diversity communities ("urban stream syndrome"). Several recent projects have aimed to clean up Leicester's watercourses. Although well-meaning these are mostly cosmetic since nothing has been done to reduce harmful inputs, and there has been no real progress in reversing the damaging concrete canalisation of past decades. A few wild flowers and shrubs have been planted and litter, such as the inevitable shopping trolleys, removed. Surprisingly, litter removal in itself might be counter productive. Invertebrates readily colonise artificial surfaces as long as they are non-toxic. An article from Nottingham and Loughborough looked at several urban streams including Saffron Brook and showed that anthropogenic litter in urban rivers supports distinct and diverse macroinvertebrate communities (Anthropogenic litter is a novel habitat for aquatic macroinvertebrates in urban rivers. (2021) Freshwater Biology, 66(3), 524-534). Compared with the harshness of the bare concrete channel, building waste, broken bottles and shopping trolleys are invertebrate paradise. Once again wildlife and the tidy brigade are in conflict. 

 


Saturday, 15 March 2025

In it for the long term

Recovered grasslands need more than 75 years of continuous management to regain their biodiversity because specialized pollinators are slow to return (also applies to fungi, etc, e.g. waxcaps). This underscores the importance of preserving old grasslands as reservoirs of biodiversity. Don't let developers tell you otherwise! 

Long-term management is required for the recovery of pollination networks and function in restored grasslands, Journal of Applied Ecology (2025). DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.70017


Saturday, 1 March 2025

Entomology Update - February 2025

Another month of unhelpful weather for entomology, so in between rare (and unproductive) trips, I've been delving into DNA - stuck indoors for most of the month I've clearly had too much time on my hands. 

A helpful overview of DNA barcoding. Whether you like it or not, DNA is an increasingly important (but not the only) part of entomology. 

I revisited the taxonomic problem surrounding a group of Bugs which has been bothering me for a while. 

More DNA delving, Springtails this time. 

Sorry, another photography post! 

DNA, DNA, what's worse than DNA? Taxonomy, that's what! 

Bathyphantes nigrinus