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SUBSIDY AND STRESS RESPONSES OF STREAM PERIPHYTON TO GRADIENTS IN WATER VELOCITY AS A FUNCTION OF COMMUNITY GROWTH FORM
Author(s) -
Biggs Barry J. F.,
Goring Derek G.,
Nikora Vladimir I.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
journal of phycology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.85
H-Index - 127
eISSN - 1529-8817
pISSN - 0022-3646
DOI - 10.1046/j.1529-8817.1998.340598.x
Subject(s) - periphyton , diatom , biology , sloughing , biomass (ecology) , mucilage , algae , diffusion , nitzschia , botany , growth rate , epiphyte , photosynthesis , shear stress , ecology , phytoplankton , nutrient , materials science , composite material , medicine , physics , geometry , mathematics , pathology , thermodynamics
Previous studies have shown major differences in the way biomass of stream periphyton is controlled by spatial variations in velocity. We hypothesize that these differences may be the result of different growth forms within the community. Some dense and coherent growth forms (e.g. mucilaginous diatom/cyanobacterial mats) may be resistant to diffusion and also resistant to dislodgment by shear stress. Higher velocities applied to such communities could therefore be expected to enhance biomass accrual by increasing rates of mass transfer, but without greatly increasing losses through sloughing. Conversely, other growth forms (e.g. long filamentous green algae) have an open matrix, and high rates of diffusion into the mats can potentially occur even at low velocity. However, as velocities increase, high skin friction and form drag should lead to higher rates of sloughing. The overall result of these processes should be that maximum biomass occurs at low velocities. This “subsidy‐stress” hypothesis was tested twice with each of three different periphytal growth forms: a coherent, mucilaginous, diatom community; a moderately coherent, stalked/ short, filamentous diatom community; and an open‐weave, long, filamentous green algal community. A monotonic increase in chl a biomass occurred as a function of near‐bed velocities for the first of the two mucilaginous diatom communities investigated. No biomass‐velocity relationship was found, however, with the second mucilaginous community, probably because the waters were highly enriched and mass transfer driven by molecular diffusion was probably high throughout the velocity gradient. Biomass was moderate at low velocities, peaked at near‐bed velocities from 0.18 to 0.2 m·s −1 (∼0.40–0.45 m·s −1 mean column velocity), and then decreased at higher velocities in both of the stalked/ short filament communities of diatoms analyzed. With the long filamentous green algal communities, a monotonic reduction in biomass occurred as a function of increases in velocity. Proliferations greater than 100 mg·m −2 chl a occurred at low near‐bed velocities (i.e. <0.2 m·s −1 ), after which biomass declined nearly exponentially as a function of increasing velocity to less than 10 mg·m −2 chl a at velocities greater than 0.4 m·s −1 . These biomass‐velocity trends support our hypothesis that community growth form determines periphytal responses to spatial variations in velocity within stream reaches.

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