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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Indirect Effects of Omnivorous Crayfish on Semiarid Stream Macroinvertebrate Communities Mediated by Novel Riparian Vegetation

January 2012 (has links)
abstract: Novel resource inputs represent an increasingly common phenomenon in ecological systems as global change alters environmental factors and species distributions. In semiarid riparian areas, hydric pioneer tree species are being replaced by drought-tolerant species as water availability decreases. Additionally, introduced omnivorous crayfish, which feed upon primary producers, allochthonous detritus, and benthic invertebrates, can impact communities at multiple levels through both direct and indirect effects. In arid and semiarid systems of the American Southwest, crayfish may be especially important as detrital processors due to the lack of specialized detritivores. I tested the impact of virile crayfish (Orconectes virilis) on benthic invertebrates and detrital resources across a gradient of riparian vegetation drought-tolerance using field cages with leaf litter bags in the San Pedro River in Southeastern Arizona. Virile crayfish increased breakdown rate of drought-tolerant saltcedar (Tamarix ramosissima), but did not impact breakdown of Fremont cottonwood (Populus fremontii), Gooding's willow (Salix goodingii), or seepwillow (Baccharis salicifolia). The density and composition of the invertebrate community colonizing leaf litter bags were both heavily influenced by litter species but not directly by crayfish presence. As drought-tolerant species become more abundant in riparian zones, their litter will become a larger component of the organic matter budget of desert streams. By increasing breakdown rates of saltcedar, crayfish shift the composition of leaf litter in streams, which in turn may affect the composition and biomass of colonizing invertebrate communities. More research is needed to determine the full extent to which these alterations change community composition over time. / Dissertation/Thesis / M.S. Biology 2012
2

The hyporeic zone as a primary source of invertebrate community resilience in intermittent alluvial rivers : evidence from field and mesocosm experiments / La zone hyporhéique favorise la résilience des communautés d'invertébrés dans les rivières alluviales intermittentes : expériences de terrain et mésocosmes en laboratoire

Vander Vorste, Ross 10 December 2015 (has links)
Un paradigme émergent prédit que les perturbations influencent les processus qui déterminent l'organisation des communautés. L'assèchement des rivières (disparition complète d'eau de surface pour une durée déterminée) est une perturbation naturelle affectant les cours d'eau dans de nombreuses régions du monde. De plus en plus de cours d'eau pérenne s'assèchent en réponse aux changements globaux. Toutefois, l'effet de ces assèchements sur les communautés aquatiques et les processus impliqués dans leur résilience restent mal quantifié et mal compris. A travers quatre études allant de suivis de terrain à des expérimentations in-situ et des mésocosmes en laboratoire, une résilience exceptionnelle des communautés d'invertébrés a été mesurée dans huit rivières alluviales. La zone hyporhéique semble être la principale source de recolonisation expliquant la forte résilience de ces communautés. En laboratoire, l'augmentation de la température et de la compétition intra-spécifique entraine une migration de Gammarus pulex dans la zone hyporhéique. L'augmentation de la profondeur de la zone hyporhéique lors d'assèchements pourrait réduire la résilience et avoir des effets sur les fonctions de l'écosystème (décomposition de litière). Ces résultats montrent que les assèchements n'ont pas toujours des effets sévères sur les communautés d'invertébrés des rivières alluviales qui semblent même très résilientes. La zone hyporhéique joue un rôle primordial dans la résilience des communautés des cours d'eau. Un accent devrait être mis sur la protection de la zone hyporhéique dans les rivières alluviales afin de préserver cette capacité de résilience face aux changements globaux / Understanding community response to disturbance is essential to identifying processes that determine their assembly and to predicting the future effects of climate change on biodiversity and ecosystem functions. Drying (complete loss of surface water) is a natural disturbance affecting 50% of rivers worldwide and is occurring more in perennial rivers due to climate change. However, its effects on aquatic invertebrate communities and the underlying processes contributing to their resilience (i.e. return to pre-drying or undisturbed levels) have not been well quantified. Using 4 congruous field and mesocosm experiments to quantify community resilience and identify its primary sources in environmentally harsh alluvial rivers. First, I found communities in 8 alluvial rivers were highly resilient to moderate and severe drying. Second, I showed that the hyporheic zone (saturated interstitial sediments) can be the primary source of colonists, promoting high community resilience. Third, I found high water temperature and intraspecific competition caused Gammarus pulex, a common benthic detritivore, to migrate into the hyporheic zone. Fourth, I found increasing depth to the water table diminished the hyporheic zone’s role as a source of colonists by reducing survival of G. pulex. My results support an emerging concept that harsh ecosystems are highly resilient and indicate that the effects of drying on biodiversity and ecosystem functions could vary across river systems. In alluvial rivers, the hyporheic zone can contribute strongly to community resilience and management should focus on protecting and restoring vertical connectivity to maximize resilience to climate change

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