Influence of stream Habitat and Land-Use on Macroinvertebrate Assemblages of The Henry's Fork Watershed

Authors

  • David W. Bressler Henry's Fork Foundation, PO. Box 550, Ashton, ID 83420
  • Jim S. Gregory Gregory Aquatics, 5306 Zollinger Road, Mackay, ID 83251

Keywords:

aquatic macroninvertebrates, habitat, land use, correlations, watersheds, EPT, spring-fed stream

Abstract

We investigated relationships among benthic macroinvertebrate assemblages, stream physical habitat, and land use in the Henry's Fork watershed, Idaho and Wyoming. Macroinvertebrate assemblages were described with five biological metrics: benthic macroinvertebrate density, taxa richness, EPT (Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera, Trichop tera) richness, percent EPT, and percent dominant taxon. Ten physical habitat variables were used to describe the inorganic and organic substrate and channel morphology of the streams sampled. Land use in 10 subwatersheds was assessed using a Geographic Inf01mation System (GIS). Pearson product-moment and canonical correlation analyses were used to assess relationships among the macroinvertebrate, habitat, and land-use variables. Macroinvertebrate density, EPT richness, and dominant taxon metrics were highest in spring-fed streams with small, yet likely stable, highly embedded substrates and abundant macrophyte grawth. The percent [PT metric was highest in runoff-dominated streams with large, heterogeneous, less embedded substrates. Taxa richness was negatively correlated with percent rangeland, and percent [PT was negatively c01·related with percent agricultural land. The [PT richness metric was positively correlated with percent forested land. There were no sign ificant correlations between stream habitat and land use, indicating that land use may have influenced macroinvertebrate assemblages via water quality or physical habitat characteristics not measured in this study.

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Published

2000-09-30

Issue

Section

Independent Refereed Articles