Dovciak A L, Perry J A
Department of Biology and General Ecology, Zvolen Technical University, Kolpasská 9/B, 969 00 Banská Stiavnica, Slovakia.
Environ Manage. 2002 Sep;30(3):365-77. doi: 10.1007/s00267-002-2529-6.
Our lack of understanding of relationships between stream biotic communities and surrounding landscape conditions makes it difficult to determine the spatial scale at which management practices are best assessed. We investigated these relationships in the Minnesota River Basin, which is divided into major watersheds and agroecoregions which are based on soil type, geologic parent material, landscape slope steepness, and climatic factors affecting crop productivity. We collected macroinvertebrate and stream habitat data from 68 tributaries among three major watersheds and two agroecoregions. We tested the effectiveness of the two landscape classification systems (i.e., watershed, agroecoregion) in explaining variance in habitat and macroinvertebrate metrics, and analyzed the relative influence on macroinvertebrates of local habitat versus regional characteristics. Macroinvertebrate community composition was most strongly influenced by local habitat; the variance in habitat conditions was best explained at the scale of intersection of major watershed and agroecoregion (i.e., stream habitat conditions were most homogeneous within the physical regions of intersection of these two landscape classification systems). Our results are consistent with findings of other authors that most variation in macroinvertebrate community data from large agricultural catchments is attributable to local physical conditions. Our results are the first to test the hypothesis and demonstrate that the scale of intersection best explains these variances. The results suggest that management practices adjusted for both watershed and ecoregion characteristics, with the goal of improving physical habitat characteristics of local streams, may lead to better basin-wide water quality conditions and stream biological integrity.
我们对河流生物群落与周边景观条件之间关系的理解不足,这使得难以确定最适合评估管理措施的空间尺度。我们在明尼苏达河流域研究了这些关系,该流域被划分为主要的流域和农业生态区域,这些区域是根据土壤类型、地质母质、景观坡度以及影响作物生产力的气候因素划分的。我们从三个主要流域和两个农业生态区域的68条支流中收集了大型无脊椎动物和河流栖息地数据。我们测试了两种景观分类系统(即流域、农业生态区域)在解释栖息地和大型无脊椎动物指标差异方面的有效性,并分析了当地栖息地与区域特征对大型无脊椎动物的相对影响。大型无脊椎动物群落组成受当地栖息地的影响最大;在主要流域和农业生态区域的交叉尺度上,栖息地条件的差异得到了最好的解释(即,在这两种景观分类系统交叉的物理区域内,河流栖息地条件最为均匀)。我们的结果与其他作者的研究结果一致,即来自大型农业集水区的大型无脊椎动物群落数据的大部分变异可归因于当地的物理条件。我们的结果首次验证了这一假设,并表明交叉尺度最能解释这些差异。结果表明,针对流域和生态区域特征进行调整的管理措施,旨在改善当地溪流的物理栖息地特征,可能会带来更好的全流域水质条件和溪流生物完整性。