Responses of organic matter and macroinvertebrates to
placements of boulder clusters in a small stream of southwestern British
Columbia, Canada
Junjiro N. Negishi and John S. Richardson
Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci./J. Can. Sci. Halieut. Aquat. 60(3): 247-258 (2003)
Abstract: Diversity
and productivity of stream food webs are related to habitat heterogeneity and
efficiency of energy retention. We tested the hypothesis that experimental
boulder placements in a second-order stream would increase diversity and
abundance of macroinvertebrates by restoring detrital retention and habitat
heterogeneity. Two relatively natural, upstream, reference reaches and a
downstream treatment reach with a relatively straight channel and less woody
debris were studied for 3 months before and 1.2 years after the placement of
six boulder clusters in the treatment reach. Mean velocity and its coefficient
of variation increased in the treatment reach (140 and 115%, respectively),
whereas the reference reaches remained relatively unchanged after the
placements. Enhanced particulate organic matter storage (550%) was accompanied
by increased total macroinvertebrate abundance (280%) in the treatment reach,
converging with those of the reference reaches almost 1 year after the treatment.
Detritivorous taxa numerically dominated the macroinvertebrate community, the
total densities of which were best predicted by the fine fraction of organic
matter biomass at microhabitat scale. However, the effect of boulder clusters
on taxonomic richness was negligible. Our findings suggest that boulder
clusters can be used at least as a short-term means to restore
macroinvertebrate productivity in detritus-based stream systems.