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Local disturbance history affects patchiness of benthic river algae
Author(s) -
Matthaei Christoph D.,
Guggelberger Cornelia,
Huber Harald
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
freshwater biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.297
H-Index - 156
eISSN - 1365-2427
pISSN - 0046-5070
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-2427.2003.01103.x
Subject(s) - benthic zone , ecology , disturbance (geology) , algae , biomass (ecology) , flood myth , diatom , floodplain , environmental science , streams , biology , geography , paleontology , computer network , archaeology , computer science
Summary 1. Recent research has shown that high‐flow events in streams leave a small‐scale mosaic of bed patches that have experienced scouring, sediment deposition (fill), or remained stable. Few studies have investigated if this ‘local disturbance history’ contributes to the patchy distribution of benthic organisms in streams and rivers. 2. In the present research, we demonstrate that local disturbance history in a mid‐sized river can have both short‐ and long‐term effects on epilithic algae. Chains buried vertically in the substratum of the river bed (236 in a 800‐m reach) indicated that two floods (return periods ≤1 year) caused a mosaic of bed patches with different disturbance histories. Once after the first and twice after the second flood, we sampled epilithic algae (mainly diatoms) in replicate patches that had been scoured, filled, or remained stable during the respective event. Algal biomass and cell density per substratum area were determined. 3. Three months after the first flood, algal biomass, total diatom density, diatom taxon richness, and densities of six of nine most common taxa were highest in fill patches. Six days after the second flood, biomass was highest in stable patches, indicating a refugium function of these patches. The refugium patches consisted of average‐sized stones, in contrast to previous studies of flood refugia for benthic algae in which these refugia were always large and/or immobile substrata. Four weeks after the second flood, diatoms tended to be most abundant in scour patches. With one exception, these differences between patch types could not be attributed to differences in local near‐bed current velocity or water depth. 4. The effects of disturbance history were more complex than a simple refugium function of stable patches because algal patterns changed with time since the last disturbance, possibly depending on the successional state of the algal mats.