Analyses of stable isotope (δ
13C and δ
15N) and C:N ratios of food webs within a floodplain and a constricted-channel region of the Ohio River during October 1993
and July 1994 indicate that the increasingly influential flood pulse concept (FPC) does not, for either location, adequately
address food web structure for this very large river. Furthermore, results of this study suggest that the riverine productivity
model (RPM) is more appropriate than the widely known river continuum concept (RCC) for the constricted region of this river.
These␣conclusions are based on stable isotope analyses of potential sources of organic matter (riparian C
3 trees, riparian C
4 grasses and agricultural crops, submerged macrophytes, benthic filamentous algae, benthic particulate organic matter, and
transported organic matter containing detritus and phytoplankton) and various functional feeding groups of invertebrate and
fish consumers. The FPC, which stresses the key contribution of organic matter, particularly terrestrial organic matter, originating
from the floodplain to riverine food webs, was judged inappropriate for the floodplain region of the Ohio River for hydrodynamic
and biotic reasons. The rising limb and peak period of discharge typically occur in November through March when temperatures
are low (generally much less than 10°C) and greater than bank-full conditions are relatively unpredictable and short-lived.
The major food potentially available to riverine organisms migrating into the floodplain would be decaying vegetation because
autotrophic production is temperature and light limited and terrestrial insect production is minimal at that time. It is clear
from our data that terrestrial C
4 plants contribute little, if anything, to the consumer food web (based on δ
13C values), and δ
15N values for C
3 plants, coarse benthic organic matter, and fine benthic organic matter were too depleted (∼7–12‰ lower than most invertebrate
consumer values) for this organic matter to be supporting the food web. The RPM, which emphasizes the primary role of autotrophic
production in large rivers, is the most viable of the remaining two ecosystem models for the constricted-channel region of
the Ohio based on stable isotope linkage between sources and consumers of organic matter in the food web. The most important
form of food web organic matter is apparently transported (suspended) fine (FTOM) and ultra-fine particulate organic matter.
We propose that phytoplankton and detritus of an autochthonous origin in the seston would represent a more usable energy source
for benthic (bivalve molluscs, hydropsychid caddisflies) and planktonic (microcrustaceans) suspension feeders than the more
refractory allochthonous materials derived from upstream processing of terrestrial organic matter. Benthic grazers depend
heavily on nonfilamentous benthic algae (based on gut analysis from a separate study), but filamentous benthic algae have
no apparent connection to invertebrate consumers (based on δ
13C values). Amphipod and crayfish show a strong relationship to aquatic macrophytes (possibly through detrital organic matter
rather than living plant tissue). These observations contrast with the prediction of the RCC that food webs in large rivers
are based principally on refractory FTOM and dissolved organic matter from upstream inefficiencies in organic-matter processing
and the bacteria growing upon these suspended or dissolved detrital compounds. The conclusions drawn here for the Ohio River
cannot yet be extended to other floodplain and constricted-channel rivers in temperate and tropical latitudes until more comparable
data are available on relatively pristine and moderately regulated rivers.
Key words Food webs - Flood pulse concept - Ohio River - River continuum concept - Stable isotopes
Received: 3 January 1997 / Accepted: 28 August 1998