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Riverine%20Ecosystems

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Title: Mod4-E Stream Ecology - Ecosystem Processes Author: glenn merrick Last modified by: Microsoft Office User Created Date: 2/3/2003 7:16:45 PM – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Riverine%20Ecosystems


1
Riverine Ecosystems
  • Energy sources allochthonous autochthonous
  • Interrelated
  • Utilized by different functional groups of
    organisms
  • How do the relationships change from headwaters
    to mouth?

2
X-section of a typical stream
Photosynthesis
Geology Temperature Nutrients Current
Photosynthesis
Detritus CPOM
Plants Algae
FPOM
1o Production
Grazers Collectors Shredders Predators
2o Production
3
River continuum Concept (RCC)
  • Vannote, R.L., G.W. Minshall, K.W. Cummings, J.R.
    Sedell, and C.E. Cushing. 1980. The River
    Continuum Concept. Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci.
    37130-137
  • General outline of how a river changes along its
    length
  • Physical dimensions
  • Changing energy inputs
  • Changes in community of organisms

4
River Continuum Concept
5
Shaded headwater stream, Ohio
www.epa.state.oh.us/dsw/wqs/headwaters/A-P6280010.
jpg
6
Outlet to Crescent Lake, Pocono Watershed, Monroe
Co., PA
7
What are some features of headwater streams?
8
Hypothetical headwater stream conditions
  • Typical of Eastern deciduous forest
  • Flows through heavily shaded forest riparian
    canopy
  • Narrow
  • Stream bottom rocky or sandy depends upon
    geological characteristics of drainage

9
Where does the energy come from?
10
Hypothetical headwater stream conditions
  • Low light low nutrients
  • Low algal and macrophyte growth
  • Mosses 1o primary producers
  • CPOM from terrestrial environment enters strea
  • Leaves (1o autumn), twigs branches
  • Respiration exceeds primary production
  • Heterotrophic stream reach
  • Energy from terrestrial sources

11
Which Guilds Should We See?
12
Which Guilds do we see?
  • Diversity of functional groups
  • Shredders 35
  • Collectors 45
  • Grazers few to 5
  • Predators 15
  • Diversity pattern?
  • large CPOM supports shredders
  • FPOM generated by shredders and mechanical
    breakdown supports collectors
  • No plants no grazers

13
Headwaters fishes
Brown trout
  • Minnows
  • Trout
  • Sculpins
  • Other fishes tolerant of seasonal and daily cold
    temperature regimes

Sculpin
14
Mid-reach streams Salmon and Lemhi in Idaho
www.lewisandclarkpictures.com/
15
How should conditions change in the mid reaches?
16
Mid-reach Conditions Structure
  • Stream wider, bottom well lit, temperatures and
    nutrients increased
  • Stream bottom rubble, rocks, pebbles with sand
    and silt in low current areas

17
Where does the energy come from?
18
Mid-reach Conditions Energy
  • Bottom algae proliferate (filamentous greens or
    diatoms)
  • Where protected -gt sediment accumulates and
    rooted aquatics grow
  • Primary production gt respiration autotrophic
    reach

19
What FFGs do you expect to find?
20
Mid-reach functional groups
  • Collectors 50 export of FPOM from headwaters
    that generated in mid-reach
  • Shredders 5 low input of CPOM
  • Grazers 30 more algae on stream bottom
  • Predators 15
  • Export of FPOM to lower reach

21
Mid-reach fishes
  • Typically tolerate wider fluctuations in daily
    and seasonal temperature
  • Overlap with some headwater species
  • Examples
  • Trout
  • Suckers
  • Minnows

Blue suckerfish
22
Lower reach river Confluence of Snake
Columbia River at Oregon/Washington Border
23
What physical features do you expect in lower
reaches?
24
Lower Reach Conditions Physical
  • Slow-flowing, deeper, lake-like
  • Increased turbidity fine-grained, shifting
    bottom

25
Where does the energy come from in the lower
reaches?
26
Lower Reach Conditions Energy
  • No sunlight on bottom no algal growth
  • Autochthonous production from phytoplankton
    macrophytes along the margins
  • Terrestrial input of CPOM small
  • Water column has high FPOM from mid-reach
  • Respiration gt primary production -gt heterotrophic
    reach

27
Which FFGs do you expect in lower reaches?
28
Lower Reach Functional Groups
  • Collectors (filterers gatherers) 85
  • Sediment dwellers mollusks or dipteran larvae
  • Shredders and grazers absent lack of CPOM and
    periphyton
  • Predators 15

29
Lower Reach Fishes
  • Adapted to environments where temperatures
    fluctuate widely
  • Suckers
  • Carp
  • Chubs

Exotic
30
Problems with RCC
  • Different geomorphologies
  • Shorter streams in New Zealand CPOM flushed by
    floods, few shredders in many streams
  • Western US streams in dry areas often less
    shaded, even in headwaters
  • Anthropogenic changes to streams interrupt
    continuum
  • Logging or removal of riparian vegetation
  • Damming change in temperature depending whether
    water release is surface (warm) or bottom (cold)

31
Reset mechanisms
  • Changes in a river below a confluence
  • Makes receiving stream more like a stream higher
    in the continuum
  • FFGs closer to that of tributary
  • Will revert below the inlet of the tributary
  • Removal of riparian buffer in headwater
  • Change to pattern of mid-reach

32
Hyporheic community
  • Organisms occurring in the interstitial spaces
    between rocks and stones on bottom
  • Examples insect larvae
  • Stoneflies (Plecoptera)
  • Midges (Chironomidae)

33
Water on the Web
  • This presentation includes material from Water on
    the Web (WoW)
  • WOW. 2004. Water on the Web - Monitoring
    Minnesota Lakes on the Internet and Training
    Water Science Technicians for the Future - A
    National On-line Curriculum using Advanced
    Technologies and Real-Time Data.
  • http//WaterOntheWeb.org).
  • University of Minnesota-Duluth, Duluth, MN 55812.
  • Authors Munson, BH, Axler, R, Hagley C, Host G,
    Merrick G, Richards C.
  • I would also like to thank Dr. Jewett-Smith for
    her contributions to this presentation
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