Effects of canopy modification and accumulated sediment on stream communities.

Document Type

Article

Journal/Book Title/Conference

Transactions of the American Fisheries Society

Volume

100

Publication Date

1-1-1981

Keywords

Conopy, modification, accumulated sediment, stream communities

First Page

469

Last Page

478

Abstract

The relative importance of surrounding riparian vegetation and substrate composition on invertebrate community structure was investigated in six streams in Oregon, USA. We found that canopy type was more important than substrate character in influencing total abundance and guild structure. Streams without shading had higher abundances of invertebrates than did shaded streams. Most guilds were influenced by qualitative differences in food availability rather than quantity of food or substrate composition. Open streams had higher abundances in the collector—gatherer, filter feeder, herbivore shredder and piercer, and predator guilds. Contrary to expectations, shredders were no more abundant in shaded streams than in streams lacking a riparian canopy. Scraper density was inversely related to standing crop of aufwuchs, but biomass was positively correlated with quantity of aufwuchs. Examination of dominance-diversity curves showed that both canopy and substrate influenced ranked abundances of taxa, but neither canopy nor substrate strongly influenced number of taxa. Differences in community structure were not always revealed by analysis of community-level properties,

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