Effects of Stream Channelization on Aquatic Macroinvertebrates, Buena Vista Marsh, Portage County, Wisconsin
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Schmal, Robert N.
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University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, College of Natural Resources
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Abstract
Objectives of this study were to assess effects of channelization
on density and biomass of benthic and drifting macroinvertebrates,
amount of drifting seston, and water temperature and chemistry in the
Buena Vista marsh, Wisconsin. One-hundred meter sections of newly
channelized (6-8 years old) and old channelized (52-62 years old)
ditches and natural control streams from both upstream and downstream
areas of the marsh were sampled between June 1974 and May 1975, and
July 1975 and May 1976 at about 6-week intervals during ice-free
periods.
Substrate strongly influenced macroinvertebrate populations.
Mean benthic density and biomass (excluding molluscs) from upstream
and downstream areas were positively curvilinearly related to percentages
of productive substrates (r = 0.89 and 0.69, respectively).
Productive substrates, i.e., vegetation, silt detritus, and gravel,
apparently provided interstices for entrapment of drifting seston
resulting in negative relationships between seston and substrate
(r = -0.76 and -0.87 for upstream and downstream sites, respectively).
Productive substrates, discharge, drifting seston, and benthic populations
together accounted for as much as 67% of the variation observed
in drifting invertebrate density.
Channelization affected macroinvertebrate populations by creating
unstable substrate conditions during spring high flows, but created
favorable vegetation and silt-detritus substrates as spring flows
subsided and substrates stabilized. When vegetation and silt-detritus
were predominant, invertebrate populations were high; when substrate
was largely shifting sand and unstable silt-detritus, invertebrate populations were low. Newly channelized sites had higher benthic biomass and density than old ditches and natural streams except during unstable
substrate conditions. The vegetation and silt-detritus in the ditches
were favorable to snails (Gastropoda: Mollusca) and midges (Diptera:
Chironomidae). Gastropods accounted for as much as 97% of mean
benthic biomass in the upstream new ditch and Chironomidae up to
89% of mean benthic density in the downstream new ditch. More invertebrate
taxa were collected from naturaJ streams, but differences were
not statistically significant. However, stoneflies (Plecoptera)
were only collected from natural streams, and more genera of mayflies
(Ephemeroptera) and caddisflies (Trichoptera) were collected from natural
streams than ditches.
Channelized areas, with the exception of the downstream new ditLh,
generally were devoid of depositional areas such as pools and point bars.
The resulting reduced diversity of habitats in the ditches, especially
during spoil bank instability and high spring flows, may have increased
the amount of drifting seston when the more productive substrates were
not present or not stable. Changes in amount of drifting seston at all
sites seemed to correspond with changes in productive substrates and
water level fluctuations.
Channelization appeared to affect invertebrate drift through its
influence on drifting seston and benthos. Increases in invertebrate
drift upstream, especially Chironomidae, corresponded to increases in
amount of seston (r = 0.71). Drift density at all sites downstream was
significantly related to benthos density (r = 0.74). Numbers of drifting
taxa were highest at sites with the highest percentages of sand substrate
in their respective areas, the upstream old ditch and downstream natural stream. The downstream natural stream, despite low numbers of benthic
taxa due to a predominantly shifting sand bottom, had significantly more
invertebrate taxa in the drift than the downstream ditches.
Water temperature and chemistry did not differ greatly among the
natural streams and ditches, which receive approximately 90% of their
flow from gound water. However, water temperature was generally higher
in the ditches than in natural streams. Increases in water temperatures
in the ditches may have resulted from removal of bank shading and slowing
of flow. Water temperature exceeded 25°C (the 133-hr upper lethal
temperature for brook trout, Salvelinus fontinalis for 5 consecutive
days in the downstream new ditch in 1975. New and old channelized areas
had higher alkalinity and total and calcium hardness than the natural
streams.
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Wisconsin Cooperative Fishery Research Unit