Abstract: | A survey of 21 lotic habitats from the Mt. St. Helens region, Washington, was conducted during late summer 1986, six years after the eruption. A total of 152 taxa was observed (94 diatoms, 36 chlorophytes, 19 cyanophytes, 2 xanthophytes, and I rhodophyte). Sampling sites were classified by TWINSPAN (two-way indicator species analysis) and ordinated by DECORANA (detrended correspondence analysis). In general, both techniques corresponded well with each other and grouped sites according to the intensity of disturbance that they experienced. Species richness and diversity values tended to be lowest at the most heavily disturbed sites. Chlorophyll a values ranged over two orders of magnitude and tended to be higher at sites sampled from small, low-discharge tributaries. Loowit Creek, a thermally influenced stream that begins within the volcanic crater, was dominated by thick mats of the cyanophyte Mastigocladus laminosus. A general comparison of the present study with one conducted just after Mt. St. Helens erupted suggests that successional processes are operating in these lotic algal communities. |