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AM. ZOOLOGIST, 8:53-59 (1968). Secondary Productivity in Terrestrial Communities FRANK B. GOLLEV Institute of Ecology and Department of Zoology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30601 SYNOPSIS. Secondary productivity is one portion of energy flow in a community, which includes the ingestion and assimilation of energy, and the expenditure of energy in metabolism by consumer organisms. The purpose of this paper is to describe the ecological significance of energy flow in consumers and to discuss methods of measuring its components. Data pertaining to 20 terrestrial animal populations are presented. About 20% of the energy assimilated by invertebrates is manifested as net production, while only about 2% of the assimilated energy is represented by net production in populations of birds and mammals. The relationship between production and metabolism appears to depend on the capacity for homeothermy. For a given amount of assimilated energy, homeotherms produce less than heterotherms. The ecologist defines secondary productivity as the net quantity of food or energy ingested that is transferred to the tissue of. heterotrophs over a period of time. It is one component of the energy flow process diagramed in Figure 1. Secondary productivity is expressed as an increase in biomass, e.g., as growth, deposition of fat, or birth of young. The ecologist is interested in this parameter because it is an index to the significance of a population in terms of food resources made available to other predatory populations in the food-chain. Applied fields, such as animal husbandry and wildlife management, seek to increase the total output and the extent of utilization of secondary productivity by man. The concepts of food-chain and food-web are central to the study of secondary production. The energy flow diagram in Figure 1 need only be expanded to illustrate SECONDARY PRODUCTION ASSIMILATED ENERGY ING ^WA METABOLISM •uiINASSIMILATED ENERGY FJG. 1. the food-chain: with herbivores eating plants, and carnivores feeding upon herbivores. But the food-chain is a simplification of the actual trophic relationships found in most natural communities. Heterotrophic populations feed on the net primary productivity of plants and on the secondary production of other consumer populations in a complex web. The full skein of feeding relationships has never yet been described for any terrestrial community, but we know from the diversity of communities that food-webs may be extremely complicated. The diagram of energy flow makes it clear that secondary production is but one of a series of interrelated processes. For this reason secondary production cannot be considered alone. Within a population we must consider the energy cost of metabolism because this expenditure competes with secondary productivity. The assimilated energy represents the total energy budget of the population, and it is conventional to consider that all of this energy is utilized either in metabolism or expressed in some form of production. In some studies it may be useful to consider the amount of energy which is ingested but not assimilated. Although this energy may be changed in state, it does not enter the energy budget of the consumer and is merely hastened to eventual exploitation by decay organisms. For the study of energy flow and secondary productivity we require two kinds of information: (1) a census of the energetically significant members of the population of species over an appropriate period of time, and (2) an estimate of the separate energy components for each single population. We consider methods of obtaining these kinds of information below. CENSUS OF THE POPULATION Methods of censusing animals are almost 53 54 FRANK B. TABLE 1. Caloric values and ash content of various stages of the meadow spittlebug (Philaenus spumarius). Data from Wiegert (1965). Ash Stage cal/ash-free gram % dry weight 6503 4976 5674 5801 5780 5902 5625-6116 3.1 8.1 7.0 6.1 4.3 3.2 Eggs 1st Instar 2nd " 3rd " 4th " 5th " Adults 0.1-2.1 as varied as the species of animals themselves. Unfortunately, few techniques give absolute estimates of abundance in a unit area. The most successful of these utilize some peculiarity of the species which permits a count of all the animals over successive time periods. Sessile, slow-moving, or social animals, and those large or conspicuous enough to be recognized visually may all be censused fairly completely. In studies of energy flow, we are specifically interested in the dynamics of components of the population which are energetically significant. The age structure of the population is often of great importance. For example, Wiegert (1965) has shown that the different stages in the life history of the meadow spittlebug have different caloric values (Table 1). In this species the ontogenetic range in caloric content was as great as that observed in 17 different species of animals (Slobodkin and Richman, 1961). Different age groups may vary in their capacity for assimilation. Phillipson (1960) showed that, in the phalangid Mitopus, the energy assimilated from ingested material was 74% for instar II but only 44% for instar VI (Table 2). Because the early instars could not tear up the hard parts of their prey, the food entering their guts was TABLE 2. Assimilation of collembolan food by instars of the phalangid, Mitopus mono. Data from Phillipson (1960). Instar Pood Intake ( m g) II III IV V "VT VII 0.129 0.229 0.357 1.069 1.539 — % Feces (mg) Assimilation 0.035 0.095 0.162 0.484 0.862 74 59 55 55 44 47 GOLLEY made up largely of highly digestible fat and muscle. In both of the foregoing examples a gross census of numbers would have concealed important variability in the energetically significant portions of the population. In addition to an enumeration of total numbers, we usually need the weight distribution of the population. This is because energy flow is usually described in terms of body weight (i.e., as cal/g). The distribution of ages and weights varies during the year, so a series of censuses is usually required. INTAKE OF ENERGY Intake of energy may be determined directly by field observations or by measuring food consumption in the laboratory. In laboratory experiments ecologists have devised ingenious techniques to provide organisms with suitable conditions and foods. In these investigations, the food is simply weighed before eating commences and after feeding has been completed. The difference in weight indicates the amount of food consumed. Of course, there are problems of waste and change in weight of food due to evaporation of water. As Odum, et al. (1962) have suggested, an advantage of the feeding technique is that the food can be concentrated in a small area while the animal is allowed to roam throughout a large cage. Thus, patterns of activity may be more natural. There are also indirect ways to determine intake of food. F'or example, the ratio of a natural or introduced tag in the food to that appearing in the animal or in its feces may be used to estimate intake. An interesting experiment illustrating this approach with a beetle (Chrysomela knabi) was reported by Crossley (1966). The tag used was the radioactive isotope Cs137, which occurred in both plants and beetles in a contaminated area. The amount of tag in the food and beetles was determined by conventional counting techniques, and the elimination of Cs137 from the beetles was determined in the laboratory. These measurements permitted Crossley to estimate the intake of food (Table 3), with TERRESTRIAL SECONDARY PRODUCTIVITY 55 TABLE 3. Determination of food consumption by third instar leaf beetles (Chrysomela knabi). Data from Crossley (1966). Statistics Mean Valne Elimination constant (fc) Concentration in larvae in the field (§) Larval rate of intake of Cs (r) Concentration in plant in the field Larval feeding rate on plant Mean weight of larvae Larval feeding rate on plants Feeding rate determined in laboratory the formula: where r is the rate of feeding, k is the fraction of radioactivity eliminated per day, and Qa is the concentration of radioisotope in the organic material at equilibrium concentration. The rate calculated by this method was 9.2 mg plant/larva/day. Crossley also measured intake of food in the laboratory using conventional weighing techniques and found that the consumption was about 9 mg plant/larva/day. Other ratio-techniques use naturally occurring, non-radioactive chemical indicators. ASSIMILATION OF ENERGY Not all the energy that is ingested is assimilated by the animal; some of the food is indigestible, and this portion is egested. For practical purposes the difference between the energy ingested and that defecated is assimilated energy. But there may be problems—especially in measuring excretions. Wastes excreted through the kidneys have been assimilated and should not be subtracted from food-intake, yet often kidney excretions cannot be separated from egestions from the digestive tract. Not all of the feces are undigested material; glandular secretions, cells from the gut wall and microorganisms also occur in the feces. These problems are best handled by an independent description of what excreta do and do not include for each species studied. It should also be recalled that these wastes form a source of food for other organisms in the community. METABOLISM The investigation of the energy expendi- 2.08 per day 62 pe1"mCs/g larva 129 pe Cs/g larva/day 43.3 pcOT Cs/g plant 2.98 g plant/g larva/day 3.1 mg 9.2 mg plant /larva/day ~ 9 mg plant/larva/day ture of individual organisms under laboratory conditions has been highly developed, and there is a large volume of information available for animals of various sizes and physiological conditions. While these data are of use to the ecologist, we seldom know the extent of the energy metabolism of freeliving animals. Hence, we must extrapolate from laboratory to field conditions. This is not a particularly serious problem with small organisms because the natural environment of these species can be simulated reasonably well in the laboratory. Estimating the metabolism of large animals is more difficult because we must often greatly restrict their activity. Investigators may measure consumption of O2 in the laboratory, convert this value to energy using standard values, and then extrapolate to the field from the laboratory conditions. Grodzinski and Gorecki (1967) suggest that this is an accurate way to determine the utilization of energy by small mammals. They found that small mammals are active for only 20-25% of the day, and that energy metabolism in nature is significantly influenced by environmental temperatures, pregnancy and lactation, huddling, etc. These phenomena can be measured in the laboratory. Other workers have suggested that activity has a more important influence on metabolism, and have initiated studies to estimate metabolism in the field. Some investigators have attempted to calculate rate of metabolism from the rate of excretion of a radioisotope (Odum and Golley, 1963; Reichle, 1967). The use of D2O18 to measure CO2-output and energy metabolism may be a useful way to measure respiration directly in the field. In the most successful 56 FRANK B. GOLLEY application of this technique, LeFebvre (1964) determined that the energy cost of flight in homing pigeons flying several hundred miles was about seven times that at rest. Other investigators who have studied the energy expense of flight argue that such a high output of energy would not permit migration over long distances. Therefore, the factor of 7 cannot be extended to birds generally. Further data are obviously needed. SECONDARY PRODUCTION Secondary production is simply expressed as the growth (increase in biomass) of the population if both prenatal and postnatal growth are considered. If only postnatal growth is measured, then the biomass of newborn animals must be added to the total. If the population is in equilibrium, secondary production is also equivalent to the caloric equivalent of all individuals dying (yield) during a selected interval of time. In other words, whatever increase in biomass is realized by growth will also eventually show up in the weight of animals removed from the population, whether by predation or natural death. A more general expression of secondary production, applicable to non-equilibrium situations is: net production rr yield ± caloric equivalent of change in standing crop Thus, if the standing crop declines during the period of investigation the second term is negative; if there is an increase in standing crop the second term is positive. This formulation was used by Teal (1957), although he did not state it explicitly. Secondary production is one of the more easily measured components of energy flow. It only requires successive weighing of individuals or cohorts from the time of conception or birth to adulthood or death. It organisms can be marked and recaptured, secondary production can be measured directly in the field. If age groups can be identified, it is also possible to follow change in weight of these groups over time. In this way the growth of an entire cohort can be determined. Secondary production is also one of the energy parameters most TABLE 4. Annual growth in one age group of the terrestrial isopocl, Ligidium japoiiica. Data from Saito (1965). Date Xumber of Individuals Mean Body Weight (mg) Growth (mg/nr) Aug. Sept. Oct. Xov. JJec. Jan. Feb. March April May .Tune July Aug. 1380 3 050 800 610 460 360 275 235 165 130 100 76 0.8 1.4 3.7 3.9 1.9 3.9 3.9 3.9 2.0 2.2 7.6 12.5 14.0 828 364 185 0 0 0 0 25 38 797 564 132 responsive to changes in the environment or in the structure of populations. For this reason secondary production may be highly variable from one season or year to the next. An interesting example of seasonal change in secondary production was given by Saito (1965) for a terrestrial isopod (Table 4). Growth was maximal after hatching and also vigorous almost a year later in the summer. There was no growth during winter. Saito added the growth of the age group shown in Table 4 to that oC other age cohorts and the new isopods born to obtain the total production of the population. COMPARISONS OF FIliLO POPULATIONS Over the past few years a number of investigators have examined the energy flow in natural populations. A comparison of their findings may reveal general relationships between species, which will in turn stimulate and direct further examination of other populations. In evaluating the energ)' dynamics of diverse populations we can compare parameters of energy flow directly, or we can examine ratios between the components. Selected data for natural terrestrial and estuarine populations are given in Table 5. The standing crop is a crude measure of the population since it represents only the average quantity of energy stored in the population over a year. The range in standing crops shown in Table 5 is great. The planthopper (Prokelisia) and the snail (Littorina) in a 57 TERRESTRIAL SECONDARY PRODUCTIVITY TABLE 5. Selected 2data on cntrgy floic from natural population* of terrestrial and cstuarine animals (Kcal/m /ycar). Data from Wiegrrt and Evans (1967) and Engchnann (1966). BERBIVOSES Spittlebugs Grasshoppers Grasshoppers Orthoptera Harvester aiit Plaiithoppers Savannah sparrow Sparrows Deermice Old field mouse Ground squirrels Meadow vole Elephant CARNIVORES Marsh wren Weasel DETRITIVOBES Oribatid mites Isopod Mussel Nonia.todes Snail Standing Crop Metabolism 0.14 0.16 0.80 0.86 19.0 21.6 30.9 205.0 3.8 0.40 0.22 24.1 0.03 0.05 0.003 0.02 0.05 0.19 7.10 0.002 0.011 .— 3.80 18.41 — 3.6 2.29 0.62 6.6 3.69 17.0 23.0 88.3 0.54 1.58 16.0 39.0 64.0 249.4 Georgia salt marsh exhibited extremely large standing crops and high levels of assimilation, metabolism, and production. Generally, secondary production is greater in the invertebrate herbivores and decomposers than in vertebrate herbivores and carnivores. Two related ratios which may be derived from Table 5 are of special interest. These are (1) the ratio of metabolism to assimilation, and (2) the ratio of production to metabolism. An average of about 90% of assimilated energy is used in metabolism, but vertebrates use proportionally more of their available energy in metabolism (ca. 98%) than do invertebrates (ca. 79%). As Engelmann (1966) has pointed out, this difference also implies that invertebrates invest a greater proportion of their assimilated energy in production of new biomass. A plot of the data in Table 5 (Fig. 2) illustrates this distinction more clearly (see also Engelmann, 1966, p. 105). The one point which seems to be inconsistent with the general pattern is for the ant, Pogonomyrmex hadius (see Golley and Gentry, 1964). If this species is omitted, a comparison of the slopes of lines drawn through the data Secondary Productivity 0.08 0.51 11.0 4.0 0.09 70.0 0.04 0.05 0.01 0.12 0.11 0.52 0.34 0.4 0.013 0.43 3.5 16.7 21.0 40.6 Assimilated Productivity X 100/Assiniilation Energy 0.88 1.37 30.0 25.6 31.0 275.0 3.6 9.1 37.2 36.6 15.6 0.3 25.5 3.S0 17.52 23.3 1.1 2.1 1.6 1.8 2.9 3.0 1.5 8S.7 0.55 0.5 2.4 2.01 19.5 56.0 21.4 17.9 29.8 24.7 14.0 2.34 0.63 6.7 85 290 points for vertebrates and invertebrates yields a £-value of 1.328, with 15 degrees of freedom. This value is significant at the 90% level but not at the 95% level. However, the data in Figure 2 exhibit a curvilinear (rather than linear) relationship, and the pattern merits further analysis. The data in Table 5 have been discussed in terms of vertebrates vs. invertebrates, but as Engelmann (1966) pointed out, a more meaningful distinction is probably homeothermy 7/5. heterothermy. Recent work by Turner (personal communication) indicates that the ratio of production to assimilation in the lizard, Uta stansburiana, is about 80-85%, a proportion generally similar to that exhibited by invertebrates. SECONDARY PRODUCTION IN TERRESTRIAL LABORATORY POPULATIONS There have been several studies of the dynamics of confined populations in the laboratory and, with knowledge of the body weight of the animals, the data from these studies may be converted to production of biomass. Petrusewicz (1963) adopted this approach in his study of confined populations of protozoans, insects, and mammals. 58 FRANK B. GOLLEY total increase in biomass. The weight of individuals dying in the population may also be considered an estimate of secondary production; however, this statistic does not account for losses of weight during the life of the individual. The difference between total increase in weight and total weight at o 0 0 death is due to the fact that total increase 0 in weight is the sum of all positive increases in weight measured at intervals of one month (including gain of weight after weight-loss). Secondary production in this study was the total increase in weight minus weight-losses, and it ranged from 86.1 to 88.8% of the total increase in weight. While FIG. 2. The relationship between metabolism and secondary production varied greatly besecondary production (Kcal/m2/year) for populatween populations, on a per capita basis it tions of vertebrates (open circles) and invertebrates was essentially constant between popula(solid circles). The invertebrate point at upper left is for the harvester ant (Pogonomyrmex badius). tions (6.5 to 7.3 grams per individual). He concluded that decrease in production As far as I know there has been but one is directly associated with increase in the study of the energy flow in a confined popusize of the medium or habitat. Later, Wal- lation of a terrestrial animal. Brown (1963) kowa and Petrusewicz (1967) evaluated sec- studied two populations of laboratory mice, ondary production directly in confined one during the phase of early growth and populations of laboratory mice (Table 6). the second after growth had ceased. MeFour populations, each started with 10 tabolism was measured by confining indimales and 10 females, were observed for viduals removed from the population in 182 weeks. These populations lived in respirometers for a period of about one cages 6.15 m2 in extent. These investigators hour. Secondary production was measured measured loss of body weight of individ- by weighing the mice daily. The growing ual mice, weight of mice dying in the popu- population exhibited some secondary prolations, and increase in body weight, so duction, while the denser population acproduction can be considered from several tually lost energy through loss of weight points of view. The sum of all increases (Table 7). In the growing population the in weight is an overestimate of secondary ratio of production to assimilation was production because it assumes that produc- 3.1%, a value only slightly greater than tion is always positive. Loss of weight, at that determined for free-living populations least in mammalian populations, seems to of mammals. Brown also examined the be important since the animals may use partitioning of energy flow by sex and age body tissue when environmental conditions group and the influence of behavior. In are suboptimal. In the populations studied the growing population, 24% of the enby Walkowa and Petrusewicz, loss of body ergy flow went to immature mice. In the weight ranged from 11.2 to 13.8% of the dense population all energy was used by TABLE 6. Secondary production (g) in confined mouse populations. Data from Walkowa and Petrusewicz (1967). Population Original Weight Loss of Weight Weight of Dead Mice Total Increase in Weight Secondary Production 1 2 3 4 346 367 368 357 1,017 1,963 2,098 3,147 7,303 11,593 14,872 22,998 8,162 14,169 16,910 28,087 7,145 12,206 14,812 24,941 59 TERRESTRIAL SECONDARY PRODUCTIVITY TABLE 7. Summary of energy flow (Kcal/day) in a confined house mouse population. Data from Brown (196S). Number of Mice Assimilation Growing population Dense population 26 110 323.6 2262.8 adults because no new mice were added to the population. In the growing population, 32% of the energy budget was directly related to territoriality and status-maintaining behavior, while in the dense population 45% of the energy was used in this manner. Brown concluded that, as density increased, intensification of social interactions exacted an ever-increasing toll of the total energy flow until none was available for recruitment. CONCLUSIONS Secondary production can be measured directly in many field populations and is responsive to environmental influences as well as to changes in structure of the population and behavior. The available data strongly suggest that the ratio of secondary production to metabolism is greater among invertebrates than among birds and mammals. This difference is not unexpected because homeotherms under laboratory conditions exhibit a higher metabolic rate per gram of body weight than do heterotherms. The ratio of secondary production to metabolism is an important ecological parameter because it influences the amount of energy available to other trophic levels of the community. REFERENCES Brown, R. Z. 1963. Patterns of energy flow in populations of the house mouse (Aftw musculus). Bull. Ecol. Soc. 44:129. Crossley, D. A., Jr. 1966. Radioisotope measurement of food consumption by a leaf beetle species, Chrysomela knabi Brown. Ecology 47:1-8. Engelmann, M. D. 1966. Energetics, terrestrial field studies, and animal productivity, p. 73-115. In J. B. Cragg, [ed.], Advances in ecological research. Academic Press, London and New York. Metabolism Secondary Production Production Assimilation % 312.8 2268.3 + 10.8 — 5.5 3.1 0.0 Golley, F. B., and j . B. Gentry. 1964. Bioenergetics of the southern harvester ant, Pogonomyrmex badius. Ecology 45:217-225. Grodzinski, W., and A. Gorecki. 1967. Daily energy budgets of small rodents. Working Meeting on Secondary Productivity, IBP. Warsaw. (In press) LeFebvre, E. A. 1964. The use of D2OU for measuring energy metabolism in Columba livia at rest and in flight. Auk 81:403-416. Odum, E. P., and F. B. Golley. 1963. Radioactive tracers as an aid to the measurement of energy flow at the population level in nature, p. 403-410. In V. Schultz and A. W. Klement, Jr., [eds.], Radioecology. Reinhold Publ. Corp., New York Odum, E. P., R. P. Martin, and B. C. Loughman. 1962. Scanning systems for the rapid determination of radioactivity in ecological materials. Ecology 43:171-173. Petrusewicz, K. 1963. General remarks on the productivity of confined populations. Ekol. Polska A 11:617-624. Phillipson, J. 1960. The food consumption of different instars of Mitopus morio (F.) (Phalangida) under natural conditions. J. Animal Ecol. 29: 299-307. Reichle, D. E. 1967. Radioisotope turnover and energy flow in terrestrial isopod populations. Ecology 48:351-366. Saito, S. 1965. Structure and energetics of the population of Ligidium japonica (Isopoda) in a warm temperature forest ecosystem. Jap. J. Ecol. 15: 47-55. Slobodkin, L., and S. Richman. 1961. Calories/gm. in species of animals. Nature 191:299. Teal, j . M. 1957. Community metabolism in a temperate cold spring. Ecol. Monographs 27:283-302. Turner, F. B. 1967. Personal communication. Walkowa, V., and K. Petrusewicz. 1967. Net production of confined mouse populations. Working Meeting on Secondary Productivity, IBP. Warsaw. (In press) Wiegert, R. G. 1965. Intraspecific variation in calories/g of meadow spittlebugs (Philaenus spu' marius L.). BioScience 15:543-545. Wiegert, R. G., and Francis C. Evans. 1967. Investigations of secondary productivity in grasslands. Working Meeting on Secondary Productivity, IBP. Warsaw. (In press)