Author:
Friberg Nikolai,Winterbourn Michael J.
Abstract
Algal biomass, microbial activity and invertebrate colonization were
investigated in 20 streams in the South Island, New Zealand. Sixteen streams
drained catchments with native or exotic forest and four were unshaded,
non-forested sites. Algal biomass on stones was highest at the unshaded sites
and was greater at forested sites east of the Alpine Divide than at forested
sites on the western side. Algal biomass on nutrient-diffusion substrata also
showed significant location (east > west) and nutrient effects. However,
responses to nutrient additions were variable among stream groups, with
unshaded and eastern native-forest streams showing the strongest response.
Abundances of invertebrates (mainly Chironomidae) colonizing diffusion
substrata were positively correlated with algal biomass in eastern native
forest streams and unshaded streams but not the other treatments. Microbial
activity, expressed as loss in weight of cellulose cloth over a three-week
period, was unaffected by location/vegetation type but increased
significantly in response to nutrient additions.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
14 articles.
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