Stone Mandy L, Whiles Matt R, Webber Jeremy A, Williard Karl W J, Reeve John D
Department of Zoology, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, IL 62901-6501, USA.
J Environ Qual. 2005 Apr 20;34(3):907-17. doi: 10.2134/jeq2004.0305. Print 2005 May-Jun.
Relationships between riparian land cover, in-stream habitat, water chemistry, and macroinvertebrates were examined in headwater streams draining an agricultural region of Illinois. Macroinvertebrates and organic matter were collected monthly for one year from three intensively monitored streams with a gradient of riparian forest cover (6, 22, and 31% of riparian area). Bioassessments and physical habitat analyses were also performed in these three streams and 12 other nearby headwater streams. The intensively monitored site with the least riparian forest cover had significantly greater percent silt substrates than the sites with medium and high forest cover, and significantly higher very fine organics in substrates than the medium and high forested sites. Macroinvertebrates were abundant in all streams, but communities reflected degraded conditions; noninsect groups, mostly oligochaetes and copepods, dominated density and oligochaetes and mollusks, mostly Sphaerium and Physella, dominated biomass. Of insects, dipterans, mostly Chironomidae, dominated density and dipterans and coleopterans were important contributors to biomass. Collector-gatherers dominated functional structure in all three intensively monitored sites, indicating that functional structure metrics may not be appropriate for assessing these systems. The intensively monitored site with lowest riparian forest cover had significantly greater macroinvertebrate density and biomass, but lowest insect density and biomass. Density and biomass of active collector-filterers (mostly Sphaerium) decreased with increasing riparian forest. Hilsenhoff scores from all 15 sites were significantly correlated with in-stream habitat scores, percent riparian forest, and orthophosphate concentrations, and multiple regression indicated that in-stream habitat was the primary factor influencing biotic integrity. Our results show that these "drainage ditches" harbor abundant macroinvertebrates that are typical of degraded conditions, but that they can reflect gradients of conditions in and around these streams.
在伊利诺伊州一个农业区的源头溪流中,研究了河岸土地覆盖、溪流生境、水化学和大型无脊椎动物之间的关系。在三条河岸森林覆盖率不同(分别为河岸面积的6%、22%和31%)且经过一年密集监测的溪流中,每月采集大型无脊椎动物和有机物质。还对这三条溪流以及附近其他12条源头溪流进行了生物评估和物理生境分析。河岸森林覆盖率最低的密集监测点的粉砂基质百分比显著高于中等和高森林覆盖率的监测点,且基质中的极细有机物含量也显著高于中等和高森林覆盖率的监测点。所有溪流中的大型无脊椎动物都很丰富,但群落反映出退化状况;非昆虫类群,主要是寡毛纲动物和桡足类动物,在密度上占主导地位,而寡毛纲动物和软体动物,主要是球蚬属和膀胱螺属,在生物量上占主导地位。在昆虫中,双翅目昆虫,主要是摇蚊科,在密度上占主导地位,双翅目昆虫和鞘翅目昆虫是生物量的重要贡献者。采集者 - 聚集者在所有三个密集监测点的功能结构中占主导地位,这表明功能结构指标可能不适用于评估这些系统。河岸森林覆盖率最低的密集监测点的大型无脊椎动物密度和生物量显著更高,但昆虫密度和生物量最低。活跃的采集 - 过滤者(主要是球蚬属)的密度和生物量随着河岸森林覆盖率的增加而降低。所有15个监测点的希尔森霍夫得分与溪流生境得分、河岸森林百分比和正磷酸盐浓度显著相关,多元回归表明溪流生境是影响生物完整性的主要因素。我们的结果表明,这些“排水沟”中栖息着大量典型的退化状况下的大型无脊椎动物,但它们能够反映这些溪流及其周边环境条件的梯度变化。