The influence of flow impoundment and river regulation on the distribution of riverine macroinvertebrates at Mammoth Cave National Park, Kentucky, USA

被引:10
作者
Grubbs, SA [1 ]
Taylor, JM
机构
[1] Western Kentucky Univ, Ctr Biodivers Studies, Bowling Green, KY 42101 USA
[2] Nature Conservancy, Dublin, OH 43017 USA
关键词
impoundment; river regulation; hydrology; macroinvertebrates; multivariate;
D O I
10.1023/B:HYDR.0000027722.23374.dc
中图分类号
Q17 [水生生物学];
学科分类号
071004 ;
摘要
The effects of impoundment by a low-head dam and hypolimnetic release from a reservoir on benthic macroinvertebrate assemblages were studied in two lowland rivers. The first river ( Green River) was initially divided into three zones ( impounded, transitional, erosional) according to hydrological characteristics. The entire reach of the second river (Nolin River) was a regime unit. Only the Green River erosional zone was free-flowing with a linear sequence of riffle-run-pool reaches. A detrended correspondence analysis showed that the Green River impounded and transitional zones were taxonomically indistinguishable while the Green River erosional zone and the Nolin River were each distinct. A canonical correspondence analysis revealed that higher surface velocity, higher summer water temperatures and more turbid conditions, and lower water temperatures were contributing parameters to the separation of the Green River erosional zone, Green River transitional/impounded zones, and the Nolin River, respectively, in ordination space. A series of one-way ANOVA's testing for differences of macroinvertebrates assemblages between the three Green River zones according to five metrics showed that the Green River erosional zone demonstrated significantly higher values and the transitional and impounded zones were ecologically similar.
引用
收藏
页码:19 / 28
页数:10
相关论文
共 48 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], [No title captured]
[2]  
Barbour MT, 1999, 841B99002 EPA US EPA
[3]   Socioeconomic and institutional dimensions of dam removals: The Wisconsin experience [J].
Born, SM ;
Genskow, KD ;
Filbert, TL ;
Hernandez-Mora, N ;
Keefer, ML ;
White, KA .
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 1998, 22 (03) :359-370
[4]  
CASPER AF, 2001, B N AM BENTHOLOGICAL, V18, P173
[5]  
CHARLES JR, 1964, P ANN C SE ASS GAM F, V18, P1
[6]   FACTORS INFLUENCING DISPERSION OF LARVAL BLACK FLIES (DIPTERA, SIMULIIDAE) - EFFECTS OF CURRENT VELOCITY AND FOOD CONCENTRATION [J].
CIBOROWSKI, JJH ;
CRAIG, DA .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES, 1989, 46 (08) :1329-1341
[7]   SPATIAL VARIATION IN THE DISTRIBUTION OF STREAM INVERTEBRATES - IMPLICATIONS OF PATCHINESS FOR MODELS OF COMMUNITY ORGANIZATION [J].
DOWNES, BJ ;
LAKE, PS ;
SCHREIBER, ESG .
FRESHWATER BIOLOGY, 1993, 30 (01) :119-132
[8]   Spatial variability and assemblage structure of stream hydropsychid caddisflies [J].
Fairchild, MP ;
Holomuzki, JR .
JOURNAL OF THE NORTH AMERICAN BENTHOLOGICAL SOCIETY, 2002, 21 (04) :576-588
[9]  
Forman RTT., 1986, Landscape Ecology
[10]   A HIERARCHICAL FRAMEWORK FOR STREAM HABITAT CLASSIFICATION - VIEWING STREAMS IN A WATERSHED CONTEXT [J].
FRISSELL, CA ;
LISS, WJ ;
WARREN, CE ;
HURLEY, MD .
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 1986, 10 (02) :199-214