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New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research abstracts


Composition and temporal changes in macroinvertebrate communities of intermittent streams in Hawke’s Bay, New Zealand

Richard G. Storey
John M. Quinn

National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research Limited
P. O. Box 11 115
Hamilton, New Zealand
email: r.storey@niwa.co.nz

AbstractMacroinvertebrate communities in three stony-bottomed intermittent headwater streams in central Hawke’s Bay, New Zealand, were sampled once per month (on average) for 11 months from autumn 2005 to summer 2006, and compared with communities in three perennial streams and three intermittent streams with perennial headwaters. Among the intermittent headwater sites, 95 taxa were found, with Oligochaeta, Copepoda, Chironomidae, and Ostracoda occurring in greatest abundance. Eight mayfly, 6 stonefly and 16 caddisfly species were found. Macroinvertebrate abundance at intermittent headwater sites was equal to nearby perennial sites, but taxon richness per sample was lower. Community composition changed progressively during the autumn-to-spring flow period (March-November 2005) at one intermittent headwater site, but at the other two sites a directional change was not evident, probably because stream flow stopped briefly several times during the flow period. Most of the taxa collected in riffles during the flow period were also in disconnected pools after flow stopped in summer (January 2006), but some taxa were absent and the disconnected pools contained several additional species. The disconnected pools in January had higher macroinvertebrate density and richness than connected pools during the flow period. At intermittent sites with perennial headwaters, taxon richness and EPT (Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera, and Trichoptera) richness were intermediate between intermittent headwater sites and perennial streams. Two weeks after flow began, the intermittent sites with perennial headwaters showed much higher EPT abundance and richness than the intermittent headwater sites, but after 8 weeks the proportional difference was less.

Keywordsbenthic; temporary pools; colonisation; community composition

New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research, 2008, Vol. 42: 109–125
0028–8330/08/4201–0109     © The Royal Society of New Zealand 2008
M07040; Online publication date 13 March 2008
Received 27 July 2007; accepted 20 November 2007

PDF file of entire paper: Print-quality (1062K) | screen-quality (807K)


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