Loughborough University
Browse
Mathers_rra3941-sup-0001-supinfo.pdf (7.65 MB)

Supplementary Information files for: Patchiness in flow refugia use by macroinvertebrates following an artificial flood pulse

Download (7.65 MB)
dataset
posted on 2022-02-04, 09:23 authored by Kate MathersKate Mathers, Christopher T. Robinson, Christine Weber
Supplementary Information files for: Patchiness in flow refugia use by macroinvertebrates following an artificial flood pulse
Flow refugia, locations that maintain substrate stability and low hydraulic stress during periods of high flow, can ensure riverine resilience in the face of increasing hydrological unpredictability. Despite their known importance, they have been overlooked in recent years with work on drought refugia currently seeing greater attention. Moreover, research on the role of flow refugia during artificial flood pulses in regulated rivers, where flood disturbances are no longer part of the hydrograph, is essentially absent. Here, we compared flow refugia for benthic macroinvertebrates among six habitats (main channel, side channel, riffle, margin, lentic including a floodplain pond, and inundated floodplain) within four different sites in response to an artificial flood pulse. We found that the grain-size distribution and macroinvertebrate community composition changed at each site following the flood. Macroinvertebrate assemblages became longitudinally homogeneous, but within-site beta diversity and taxa richness remained temporally stable following the flood pulse, suggesting the presence of flow refugia. In this respect, margin, inundated floodplain and lentic (a floodplain pond) habitats provided important flow refugia locations, particularly for the mobile mayfly Rhithrogena sp. In contrast, low substrate stability in riffle and side channels resulted in limited refugia potential for most taxa. Refuge use was however patchy with high levels of intra-habitat variability being evident for Rhithrogena sp. and the amphipod Gammarus fossarum in margin and side channel habitats. Further work is required to advance our knowledge of flow refugia in rivers with differing flow regimes to enable their integration into management and restoration schemes.

Funding

Bundesamt für Umwelt. Grant Number: 16.0113.PJ/P501-1050

History

School

  • Social Sciences and Humanities

Department

  • Geography and Environment

Usage metrics

    Geography and Environment

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC