Feeding rates of the woodlouse Armadillidium vulgare on herb litters produced at two levels of atmospheric CO2

Oecologia. 2001 May;127(3):343-349. doi: 10.1007/s004420000599. Epub 2001 May 1.

Abstract

The consumption and assimilation rates of the woodlouse Armadillidium vulgare were measured on leaf litters from five herb species grown and naturally senesced at 350 and 700 µl l-1 CO2. Each type of litter was tested separately after 12, 30 and 45 days of decomposition at 18°C. The effects of elevated CO2 differed depending on the plant species. In Medicago minima (Fabaceae), the CO2 treatment had no significant effect on consumption and assimilation. In Tyrimnus leucographus (Asteraceae), the CO2 treatment had no significant effect on consumption, but the elevated CO2 litter was assimilated at a lower rate than the ambient CO2 litter after 30 days of decomposition. In the three other species, Galactites tomentosa (Asteraceae), Trifolium angustifolium (Fabaceae) and Lolium rigidum (Poaceae), the elevated CO2 litter was consumed and/or assimilated at a higher rate than the ambient CO2 litter. Examination of the nitrogen contents in these three species of litter did not support the hypothesis of compensatory feeding, i.e. an increase in woodlouse consumption to compensate for low nitrogen content of the food. Rather, the results suggest that in herbs that were unpalatable at the start of the experiment (Galactites, Trifolium and Lolium), more of the the litter produced at 700 µl l-1 CO2 was consumed than of that produced at 350 µl l-1 because inhibitory factors were eliminated faster during decomposition.

Keywords: Elevated CO2; Herb litter; Nitrogen content; Palatability; Saprophages.