Biomonitoring in intermittent
coastal plain streams impacted by animal agriculture.
Abstract: Received for publication
February 18, 2002. Little attention has been given to the ecology of intermittent
coastal plain streams in the southeastern United States, and it is not
known whether available macroinvertebrate biomonitoring methods reliably
detect degradation in these streams. This study compared differences in
biomonitoring metrics between reference and agricultural streams, and between
the flow period (JanuaryApril) and the intermittent flow period (MayDecembe).
Percentages of crustaceans, isopods, and EphemeropteraPlecopteraTrichoptera
(EPT) were significantly higher at the reference site than the two most
impacted sites during the flow period, probably resulting from the abundance
of leaf litter and lower temperatures. During this same period, the agriculturally
impacted sites had a significantly higher percentage of dipteransóa group
that thrives in the silty, nutrient-rich waters. Four metrics (percent
Crustacea, Isopoda, Diptera, and EPT) had no overlap between values for
the most impacted and the least impacted sites during the flow period,
but no metrics were able to detect more discrete differences among sites.
Sites were physically and biologically similar during the intermittent
period when natural stresses (i.e., stagnant water, high temperatures,
low dissolved oxygen) were high, with many metrics, such as percentages
of dominant family, burrowers, chironomids, and dipterans becoming similar
at all sites. Our findings indicate that development of a better understanding
of invertebrate fauna in reference conditions and of the natural variation
in intermittent streams is necessary to develop effective biomonitoring
programs for these systems.
Davis, S. N., S. W. Golladay, G. Vellidis, and C. M. Pringle. 2003. Biomonitoring in intermittent coastal plain streams impacted by animal agriculture. Journal of Environmental Quality 32: 1036-1043.
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