Fluxes of resource subsidies, such as terrestrial leaf litter to streams and adult aquatic insects to riparian predators, are examples of important links between adjacent ecosystems. The importance of these cross‐ecosystem resource flows from donor systems to recipient consumers is increasingly recognized. Streams, especially small streams with their high edge ratio with the terrestrial system, provide excellent models for the study of subsidies and a large portion of this literature has been produced by aquatic scientists. Field experiments manipulating flows between small streams and their riparian areas (e.g. leaf litter, terrestrial invertebrates, and adult aquatic insects to riparian areas) have indicated that consumers in streams and riparian areas are highly dependent upon such subsidies and the value of the subsidies are further modified by patterns of retention and pathways of use. Experiments typically indicate rapid growth or demographic responses by consumers, indicating these populations are resource limited or at levels of incipient population limitation, and can capitalize on short‐term resource pulses. More press manipulations are still necessary to determine the dynamical consequences of subsidies for recipient communities. The nature of the subsidy (e.g. species of litter or invertebrates) and its timing are also important details that need further study. Finally, there are opportunities to consider the evolution of life cycle timing (modelling), interception strategies by recipient populations and short‐term and long‐term responses of communities. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.