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A Feasibility Study to Monitor the Macroinvertebrate Diversity of the River Nile Using Three Sampling Methods
Authors:M. Reda Fishar  W. Peter Williams
Affiliation:(1) National Institute of Oceanography and Fisheries, Inland Water and Aquaculture Branch, 101 Kasr El Aini St., Cairo;(2) Department of Life Sciences, King’s College, University of London, Franklin Wilkins Building, 150 Stamford Street, SE1 9NN, UK
Abstract:
The River Nile is one of the world’s major rivers. Its’ catchment in Egypt has a population of 75,000,000. River flow is highly regulated and there are known discharges of pollutants. 1035 km of the river downstream of the Aswan high dam was studied to test the hypothesis that representative qualitative samples can be used to estimate macroinvertebrate biodiversity. Benthic macroinvertebrates are difficult to sample in large rivers and a reliable sampling strategy is required to evaluate their ecological status. Three methods for sampling have been investigated. Ekman Grab, macrophyte sweep netting and Artificial Substrate Samplers (ASS) were used to sample 15 sites from Aswan to Cairo between September 2001 and June 2002. Organisms were identified to species level where possible. Taxon accretion curves indicated that the all taxa present at a site should be collected using either 15 grab samples, 10 macrophyte samples or 5 ASS. The best time to sample was May–June. The biodiversity of macroinvertebrates in the Nile was recorded as 50 taxa with values of 7–31 at individual bank-side sites. Mid-stream biodiversity was much lower (0–19). Lowest biodiversity occurred at sites with known pollution inputs whilst highest occurred at sites with high levels of sedimentation. A regular programme for biomonitoring is recommended which will allow current status to be confirmed and future changes detected.
Keywords:benthic macroinvertebrates  sampling  biodiversity  river  Nile
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