Abstract
In many streams with coarse substrata, there is continuous exchange between surface water and
interstitial (hyporheic) water. Upwelling hyporheic water usually contains less dissolved oxygen
and may provide nutrients that are limiting in the surface water. Downwelling stream water carries
oxygen, surface detritus and other material to the hyporheic zone where microbes and invertebrates
reside. The magnitude and direction of this hydrologic exchange can be measured using relatively
simple techniques (such as dye injections and mini-piezometers) although there are some important
limitations to consider. As hydrologic exchange has been shown to affect the distribution of benthic
algae and invertebrates in some streams, this variable has implications for a variety of lotic studies
including those of drift, leaf breakdown, benthic invertebrate colonization, sedimentation, and nutrient
limitation. Experiments in flumes and artificial stream channels usually remove the influence of hydrologic
exchange although it would be possible to incorporate this into their design. Stream ecologists should
consider assessing the significance of the hyporheic zone to surface processes by quantifying the
vectors of hydrologic exchange to ascertain how these may affect results of work conducted on the
benthos at a variety of scales.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
83 articles.
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