Do different sites in the same river have similar Trichoptera assemblages?
2005; Volume: 24; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.23818/limn.24.25
ISSN2660-8537
AutoresManuel A. S. Graça, Rufino Vieira‐Lanero, Maria João Feio,
Tópico(s)Fish Ecology and Management Studies
ResumoDuring the summer of 2001, trichoptera larvae were sampled with a kick-net in 15 sites belonging to 3 rivers of the Mondego River basin, in central-north Portugal.Simultaneously, 42 environmental variables were evaluated for each site.Twenty five species and genera of caddisflies were identified.The objective was to assess if trichoptera assemblages within a river tended to be more similar among each other than between rivers, giving the physical continuity of the habitat.Localities showed low segregation between all samples (MDS, CLUSTER and ANOSIM).The Alva River samples had the higher number of taxa and animals while the Ceira River samples had the lowest values.In terms of environmental characteristics, PCA showed high similarities between samples of the same river.However there was not total segregation of rivers.BIOENV analysis identified the set of parameters that best explain trichopteran associations per river.For the rivers, these variables were all related to habitat (e.g.pool quality, depth, substrate quality).The differences between the Alva and Ceira rivers seem to be related to the deterioration of the water quality in the Ceira river (increasing levels of sulphate, chloride and % of industrial, urban and degraded areas), which increased down the river.
Referência(s)