摘要

Benthic invertebrate communities within confluence sites, or areas of sediment deposition, are shaped by the input of catchment products including coarse woody debris, organic and inorganic particulates, and contaminants, but these sites also appear to be potential ohotspotso where recolonization of severely damaged ecosystems begins. Two species of leaf packs and a sweep netting technique were used to assess benthic invertebrate communities across a gradient of 14 confluence sites in 3 recovering lakes near the copper and nickel smelters in Sudbury, Canada. Environmental variables including delta habitat composition, delta area and length, and composition of deposited materials were used to detect spatial patterns in littoral benthic invertebrate communities. Benthic invertebrate community relationships with water chemistry were also assessed. Partial redundancy analysis (pRDA) showed that all sampling methods detected similar gradients of increasing invertebrate community richness and diversity as area and length of the sediment delta and the surface organic matter abundance increased. Two-way nested ANOVAs showed significant differences (p .05) in taxa richness and diversity metrics among sites. Of the three methods, the benthic invertebrate community measurements from the birch leaf packs provided the strongest correlations with measures of organic matter inputs or habitat characteristics of the confluence zones. These correlations suggest that tree planting in riparian areas, or organic matter or macrophyte additions to littoral zones, may enhance littoral benthic invertebrate richness and diversity in acid and metal damaged lakes.

  • 出版日期2010