Hydraulic influences on periphyton and benthic macroinvertebrates: Simulating the effects of upstream bed roughness

被引:29
作者
Quinn, JM
Hickey, CW
Linklater, W
机构
[1] NIWA, Natl. Inst. Water and Atmosph. Res., Box 11115, Hamilton
[2] Ecology Department, Massey University, Palmerston North
关键词
D O I
10.1046/j.1365-2427.1996.d01-466.x
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
1. Hydraulic conditions, periphyton biomass and invertebrate communities were compared on artificial substrates exposed to a range of upstream roughness conditions across an area of uniform current velocity and depth in a gravel-bedded river. The effect of river bed roughness was simulated by installing roughness elements upstream of artificial substrates. 2. Increasing upstream roughness reduced the average near-bed velocity above the substrates and increased short-term variability in velocity (i.e. turbulence). 3. Periphyton chlorophyll n density showed a general decline with near-bed velocity and was significantly lower on the substrates exposed to the river bed reference and 0 mm roughness treatments than the 110 mm roughness elements. Chlorophyll a was also negatively correlated with the abundance of larger collector-browsing invertebrates. This indicates that effects of the changes in hydraulic conditions on invertebrates may have contributed to the observed treatment effects on periphyton. 4. Invertebrate abundance and diversity declined with increasing upstream roughness. Filter-feeders, collector-browsers and predatory invertebrates all declined in abundance with increasing upstream roughness, but the effect was strongest for filter-feeders. Eight of the nine most common taxa showed significant treatment effects. The orthoclad chironomid, Eukiefferiella sp., was not influenced strongly by upstream roughness, but its abundance was correlated significantly with periphyton biomass.
引用
收藏
页码:301 / 309
页数:9
相关论文
共 24 条
[1]  
*APHA, 1989, STANDARD METHODS EX
[2]   PERIPHYTON RESPONSES TO A HYDRAULIC-GRADIENT IN A REGULATED RIVER IN NEW-ZEALAND [J].
BIGGS, BJF ;
HICKEY, CW .
FRESHWATER BIOLOGY, 1994, 32 (01) :49-&
[3]   THE NATURE OF THE FLUID BOUNDARY-LAYER AND THE SELECTION OF PARAMETERS FOR BENTHIC ECOLOGY [J].
CARLING, PA .
FRESHWATER BIOLOGY, 1992, 28 (02) :273-284
[4]   SHORT-TERM COLONIZATION OF ROUGH AND SMOOTH TILES BY BENTHIC MACROINVERTEBRATES AND ALGAE (CHLOROPHYLL-A) IN 2 STREAMS [J].
CLIFFORD, HF ;
CASEY, RJ ;
SAFFRAN, KA .
JOURNAL OF THE NORTH AMERICAN BENTHOLOGICAL SOCIETY, 1992, 11 (03) :304-315
[5]   BASEFLOW WATER CHEMISTRY IN NEW-ZEALAND RIVERS .1. CHARACTERIZATION [J].
CLOSE, ME ;
DAVIESCOLLEY, RJ .
NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF MARINE AND FRESHWATER RESEARCH, 1990, 24 (03) :319-341
[6]   FLOW PREFERENCES OF LARVAL CHIRONOMIDAE (DIPTERA) IN TONGARIRO RIVER, NEW-ZEALAND [J].
COLLIER, KJ .
NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF MARINE AND FRESHWATER RESEARCH, 1993, 27 (02) :219-226
[7]   AN ECOLOGICALLY USEFUL CLASSIFICATION OF MEAN AND NEAR-BED FLOWS IN STREAMS AND RIVERS [J].
DAVIS, JA ;
BARMUTA, LA .
FRESHWATER BIOLOGY, 1989, 21 (02) :271-282
[8]   COMPARISONS OF TREATMENTS AFTER AN ANALYSIS OF VARIANCE IN ECOLOGY [J].
DAY, RW ;
QUINN, GP .
ECOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS, 1989, 59 (04) :433-463
[9]   EFFECTS OF STONE TOPOGRAPHY ON ABUNDANCE OF NET-BUILDING CADDISFLY LARVAE AND ARTHROPOD DIVERSITY IN AN UPLAND STREAM [J].
DOWNES, BJ ;
JORDAN, J .
HYDROBIOLOGIA, 1993, 252 (02) :163-174
[10]   PSEUDOREPLICATION AND THE DESIGN OF ECOLOGICAL FIELD EXPERIMENTS [J].
HURLBERT, SH .
ECOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS, 1984, 54 (02) :187-211