Quantitative response of riverine benthic invertebrates to sediment grain size and shear stress

被引:0
|
作者
Stefan Lorenz
Christian Wolter
机构
[1] Leibniz-Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries,Department Biology and Ecology of Fishes
[2] Julius Kühn-Institut,Institute for Ecological Chemistry, Plant Analysis and Stored Product Protection
[3] Federal Research Centre for Cultivated Plants,undefined
来源
Hydrobiologia | 2019年 / 834卷
关键词
Hydraulic preference; Hydromorphology–biota interaction; Indicator species; River integrity; Substrate preference;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The most widespread pressure impacting river ecological status is the degradation of key hydromorphologic elements, such as sediment type and flow rate. However, almost nothing is known about the quantitative relationship between benthic invertebrate abundance and these elements. This synthesis compiles quantitative data on physical requirements and thresholds for invertebrates relative to two hydromorphologic factors: substrate size and hydraulic energy (measured as shear stress). Both factors are commonly a focus of river rehabilitation. However, we found only limited literature data that we could use to identify invertebrate preferences (189 taxa). Preferred substrate sizes of all stream epifauna we examined varied between 0.05 and 400 mm and they prefer shear stresses from 0.13 to 3.67 N m−2. There was no difference in variation of preferred conditions between the examined taxonomic levels. We suspect that taxa preferring hydraulic environments with shear stresses < 0.64 N m−2 are affected more by environmental factors than solely being constrained by substrate or hydraulic energy preferences. Such taxa might be useful as sensitive indicator species for evaluating stream integrity. Hence, to optimize restoration success for riverine biota, hydromorphological forces should be mitigated by manipulating habitat complexity in a way that it enhances intact ecological processes.
引用
收藏
页码:47 / 61
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Quantitative response of riverine benthic invertebrates to sediment grain size and shear stress
    Lorenz, Stefan
    Wolter, Christian
    [J]. HYDROBIOLOGIA, 2019, 834 (01) : 47 - 61
  • [2] Benthic shear stress and sediment condition
    Peterson, EL
    [J]. AQUACULTURAL ENGINEERING, 1999, 21 (02) : 85 - 111
  • [3] Effects of sediment bypass tunnels on sediment grain size distribution and benthic habitats
    Auel, C.
    Kobayashi, S.
    Sumi, T.
    Takemon, Y.
    [J]. RIVER SEDIMENTATION, 2017, : 169 - 169
  • [4] Effects of sediment particle size composition on survivorship of benthic invertebrates from Lake Tanganyika, Africa
    Donohue, I
    Irvine, K
    [J]. ARCHIV FUR HYDROBIOLOGIE, 2003, 157 (01): : 131 - 144
  • [5] Sediment grain size effect on benthic microalgal biomass in shallow aquatic ecosystems
    Cahoon, LB
    Nearhoof, JE
    Tilton, CL
    [J]. ESTUARIES, 1999, 22 (3B): : 735 - 741
  • [6] Sediment grain size effect on benthic microalgal biomass in shallow aquatic ecosystems
    L. B. Cahoon
    J. E. Nearhoof
    C. L. Tilton
    [J]. Estuaries, 1999, 22 : 735 - 741
  • [7] Sediment transport modelling in riverine environments: on the importance of grain-size distribution, sediment density, and suspended sediment concentrations at the upstream boundary
    Lepesqueur, Jeremy
    Hostache, Renaud
    Martinez-Carreras, Nuria
    Montarges-Pelletier, Emmanuelle
    Hissler, Christophe
    [J]. HYDROLOGY AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES, 2019, 23 (09) : 3901 - 3915
  • [8] Benthic Microalgal Biomass on Ocean Beaches: Effects of Sediment Grain Size and Beach Renourishment
    Cahoon, Lawrence B.
    Carey, Erin S.
    Blum, James E.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COASTAL RESEARCH, 2012, 28 (04) : 853 - 859
  • [9] THE INFLUENCE OF SEDIMENT PARTICLE SIZE AND ORGANIC CARBON ON TOXICITY OF COPPER TO BENTHIC INVERTEBRATES IN OXIC/SUBOXIC SURFACE SEDIMENTS
    Strom, David
    Simpson, Stuart L.
    Batley, Graeme E.
    Jolley, Dianne F.
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY, 2011, 30 (07) : 1599 - 1610
  • [10] Ecology of benthic macro-invertebrates in soft-sediment environments: A review of progress towards quantitative models and predictions
    Constable, AJ
    [J]. AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 1999, 24 (04): : 452 - 476