Responses of benthic macroinvertebrates in small intermittent streams to silvicultural practices |
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Authors: | Brown Arthur V. Aguila Yolanda Brown Kristine B. Fowler William P. |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Biological Sciences, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas 72701, USA;(2) Huron-Manistee National Forest, 1755 South Mitchell, cadillac, Michigan 49601, USA |
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Abstract: | We examined macroinvertebrate communities in small(0.1-1.0 m2) pools of intermittent streams (alwayscontainingsome water but without perennial flow) with small watersheds(2-6 ha) subjected to five types of forest harvest to assesspotential impacts of the different harvest methods. Bufferstrips10 m wide were left on each side of the streams. Each harvesttreatment was coupled with a similar unharvested referencestand.An incomplete block design included three 0.05 m2 vacuumsamples from each treatment paired with three from theadjacentreferences. There was a high degree of similarity amongreferencesfor parameters other than taxonomic composition (e.g.macroinvertebrate density, number of species, Shannondiversity,functional groups, etc.). Statistically significantdifferenceswere found between references and treatments and among harvestmethods but the responses varied among response variables(density,Shannon-Weiner diversity, species composition), differentspeciesassemblages (all invertebrates, chironomids,Ephemeroptera-Plecoptera-Trichoptera [EPT], isopods), andfunctional group categories (shredders, collector-gatherers).Wecollected 56 taxa, 7–16 per site, with low communitysimilarity(mean Jaccards=0.18, mean Bray-Curtis percentdissimilarity=81). The most severe harvest treatmentsresultedin the highest diversities of total invertebrates in thesesmallspring pool communities. |
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Keywords: | small intermittent streams silvicultural methods invertebrates watershed disturbance forest |
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