Abstract
This study examined the impact of physical disturbance from long-established road culverts on stream macroinvertebrate communities. Three streams within a 6 km section of highway on the Avalon Peninsula, Newfoundland, Canada, were sampled. Streams had the entire upstream watershed and at least 100 m downstream of the road with natural boreal forest/barren vegetation and all had, within the sampled reaches, similar physical streambed characteristics. The fauna on stones from riffles was sampled at two upstream and three downstream sites, i.e., from 50 m above to about 100 m below the road in each stream. A total of 33 taxa were identified among the streams, with differences limited to a few rare taxa. The sample site communities did not significantly differ from each other with respect to the taxa present. Total macroinvertebrate abundance by site, for combined data of all streams, indicated the site at the exit of culvert plunge pool (site 3) had significantly elevated abundances. Analysis of individual taxa showed this was primarily due to very high numbers of Simulium spp. The other most notable changes were a decrease in numbers of Hydropsyche spp. and Elmidae below the road. The abundances of the remaining taxa were more variable among all sites. The study indicated that long-standing point source physical disturbance primarily impacted taxa abundance rather than community present/absent data, which will recolonize the disturbed zone by downstream drift. The differences in abundance are probably the result of the cleaning of substrate by abrasion, movement of substrate and reduction of detritus during each spate.
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We gratefully acknowledge the support of the Department of Biology and the Environmental Science Graduate program in the Faculty of Science, Memorial University of Newfoundland, for support of this research. We also thank Dr. Peter Scott and Dr. Paul Marino for their critical comments which greatly improved the manuscript.
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Khan, B., Colbo, M.H. The impact of physical disturbance on stream communities: lessons from road culverts. Hydrobiologia 600, 229–235 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10750-007-9236-5
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10750-007-9236-5