Water Stewardship Information Sources

ID 1503
Citation Reece, PF and Richardson, JS. 1998. Seasonal Changes of Benthic Macroinvertebrate Communities in Southwestern British Columbia. Prepared for Environment Canada.
Organization Environment Canada
URL http://research.rem.sfu.ca/frap/9833.pdf
Abstract/Description or Keywords Two main goals of community ecology are to recognize patterns in species composition and to
understand the processes affecting those patterns. The first goal of this study was to identify patterns of
benthic macroinvertebrate composition between both different classes of streams and seasons in
southwestern British Columbia. Insect life cycles and environmental conditions were examined to
determine which processes were associated with patterns of community composition.
To address the goals of this study, benthic macroinvertebrate samples and associated
environmental data were collected over five sampling dates during the course of one year, 1995-1996
(late spring, summer, autumn, winter, early spring). The samples were collected from eight streams that
comprised three different classes of streams: 1) coastal streams, 2) interior plateau streams, and 3) large
rivers. Each of the stream classes has a different climate, elevation, riparian vegetation, and discharge
regime.
Seasonal change of the benthic invertebrate community was small relative to the spatial change,
i.e., between the three stream classes. Correlation analysis indicated that spatial change of the
invertebrate community in southwestern British Columbia was related to the environmental factors
channel width, mean depth, maximum depth, maximum velocity, discharge, conductivity, alkalinity,
nitrite and nitrate nitrogen, and total Kjeldahl nitrogen. Seasonal change of the community was not
directly related to the seasonal change of any of the individual environmental variables measured. It was
however, related to changes in the environment through effects of the environment on invertebrate life
cycles. Of the environmental conditions measured, temperature had the greatest influence on the timing
of insect life cycles. Abundance patterns in the small coastal and interior streams were related to the
timing of invertebrate life cycles whereas abundance was related to life cycles and the spring freshet in
the large rivers. water quality, aquatic ecology, aquatic habitat, biological water quality, chemical water quality
Information Type report
Regional Watershed Nicola, Thompson
Sub-watershed if known Glimpse Creek, Beak Creek, Mellin Creek, Spences Bridge
Aquifer #
Comments
Project status complete
Contact Name John Richardson
Contact Email [email protected]