RESPONSE OF INVERTEBRATE ASSEMBLAGES TO FLOOD DISTURBANCE IN JAPANESE LOWLAND STREAMS

Author(s):  
Kenta FUKUSAKI ◽  
Fumitaka MESAKI ◽  
Yo MIYAKE
2017 ◽  
Vol 68 (2) ◽  
pp. 308 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liliana García ◽  
Isabel Pardo

Streams are extremely vulnerable to water abstraction across the world because of increasing water demand from humans, as well as because precipitation is decreasing in many areas. To determine how water abstraction affects water chemistry, hydromorphological variables and invertebrate assemblages, we conducted an experiment in which we mimicked two levels of disturbance: stagnation and drought. The experiment was performed at two lowland streams in Galicia (north-west Spain), which were similar in physical conditions but differed in trophic status (high v. low P). Samples were taken both before and after manipulation at the upstream control and downstream-disturbed stretches. There was a significant overall effect of water abstraction on both disturbed stretches, but invertebrate assemblages responded differently between streams and within stretches. In the low-P stream, invertebrate densities remained unchanged in the drought stretch but declined in the stagnation stretch relative to the control. At the same time, the high-P stream exhibited a strong loss of diversity in both the stagnation and drought stretches. These results suggest that short-term flow reductions driven by increasing water scarcity and abstraction put benthic communities in lowland streams at risk, and that risk would be greater (in terms of biodiversity loss) in streams that are initially impaired by high-P loading.


2012 ◽  
Vol 61 (2) ◽  
pp. 97-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Péter Takács ◽  
Péter Sály ◽  
András Specziár ◽  
Péter Bíró ◽  
Tibor Erős

2021 ◽  
Vol 55 (15-16) ◽  
pp. 1021-1032
Author(s):  
Joshua W. Campbell ◽  
Alexandra Tsalickis ◽  
Anthony Cuminale ◽  
Anthony Abbate

2020 ◽  
Vol 590 ◽  
pp. 125536
Author(s):  
Toon van Dael ◽  
Toon De Cooman ◽  
Erik Smolders

Author(s):  
Martin T. Lockett ◽  
Therésa M. Jones ◽  
Mark A. Elgar ◽  
Kevin J. Gaston ◽  
Marcel E. Visser ◽  
...  

2006 ◽  
Vol 63 (1) ◽  
pp. 120-133 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tamao Kasahara ◽  
Alan R Hill

Stream restoration projects that aim to rehabilitate ecosystem health have not considered surface–subsurface linkages, although stream water and groundwater interaction has an important role in sustaining stream ecosystem functions. The present study examined the effect of constructed riffles and a step on hyporheic exchange flow and chemistry in restored reaches of several N-rich agricultural and urban streams in southern Ontario. Hydrometric data collected from a network of piezometers and conservative tracer releases indicated that the constructed riffles and steps were effective in inducing hyporheic exchange. However, despite the use of cobbles and boulders in the riffle construction, high stream dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations were depleted rapidly with depth into the hyporheic zones. Differences between observed and predicted nitrate concentrations based on conservative ion concentration patterns indicated that these hyporheic zones were also nitrate sinks. Zones of low hydraulic conductivity and the occurrence of interstitial fines in the restored cobble-boulder layers suggest that siltation and clogging of the streambed may reduce the downwelling of oxygen- and nitrate-rich stream water. Increases in streambed DO levels and enhancement of habitat for hyporheic fauna that result from riffle–step construction projects may only be temporary in streams that receive increased sediment and nutrient inputs from urban areas and croplands.


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