底栖大型无脊椎动物群落对木材采伐的响应:美国路易斯安那州中部低梯度流域的最佳管理实践

Derrick Klimesh, Adrienne V. Gossman, Y. Jun Xu, M. Kaller
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引用次数: 1

摘要

森林是路易斯安那州最主要的土地利用类型,而木材采伐是该州最重要的经济农产品。路易斯安那州已经制定了自愿最佳管理实践(BMPs),以尽量减少森林作业对溪流水质的负面影响,但对于居住在低梯度水源溪流的水生群落如何应对木材采伐,以及目前的BMPs是否有效保护群落结构和功能,人们知之甚少。2005年,我们在路易斯安那州中部的Flat Creek流域开展了一项多学科研究,以了解木材采伐活动对底栖水生大型无脊椎动物的影响,无论是否实施BMP。2007年秋季,在流域内的两条源头溪流附近砍伐了树木,随后在2006年至2009年期间,在七个河流地点采集了七次底栖大型无脊椎动物样本。我们的目标是描述低阶、低梯度河流中底栖大型无脊椎动物的群落结构,大型无脊椎动物群落如何响应木材采伐作业,以及在不同程度的BMP实施下,群落结构是否有明显的显著变化。群落结构以手形类、球形双壳类和非壳类等足类为主。方差分析表明,春季在实施bmp的采收地点下游的大多数采样点,双壳类的丰度显著增加,而马甲类和切碎类的丰度显著减少。此外,夏末两个地点的双壳类亦显著增加。我们的研究结果表明,木材采伐活动,无论是否实施BMP,对这些低梯度亚热带河流中的大型无脊椎动物的短期影响有限。在研究地点的持续监测将使我们更好地了解木材采伐对这些河流系统的长期影响,特别是河流生物群对采伐相关河流条件的恢复能力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Responses of stream benthic macroinvertebrate communities to timber harvesting: Best management practices in a low-gradient watershed in Central Louisiana, USA
Abstract Forests are the most dominant land-use type in Louisiana, and timber harvesting is the most economically important of the state’s agricultural commodities. Louisiana has developed voluntary best management practices (BMPs) to minimize negative effects of forest operations on stream water quality, but little is known about how aquatic communities inhabiting low-gradient, headwater streams respond to timber harvesting, and if the current BMPs are effective in protecting community structure and function. In 2005, we initiated a multidisciplinary study in the Flat Creek watershed in central Louisiana to discern the effects of timber harvesting activities, with and without BMP implementation, on benthic aquatic macroinvertebrates. During fall 2007, trees were removed adjacent to two headwater streams in the watershed, and benthic macroinvertebrate samples were subsequently collected at seven stream locations seven times between 2006 and 2009. Our objectives were to describe the community structure of benthic macroinvertebrates in low-order, low-gradient streams, how macroinvertebrate communities responded to timber harvest operations, and whether significant changes in community structure were evident under different levels of BMP implementation. The community structure was predominantly generalist taxa including chironomids, sphaeriid bivalves and asellid isopods. Analyses of variance demonstrated significant increases in bivalve abundance and decreases in the abundance of malacostracan and shredding taxa at most of the sampling sites downstream of BMP-implemented harvest locations in the spring. Additionally, significant increases in bivalves were also found at two sites during late summer. Our results suggest that timber harvesting activities, regardless of BMP implementation, had limited shortterm impacts on resident macroinvertebrates in these lowgradient, subtropical streams. Continued monitoring at the study sites will allow us to better understand the longterm effects of timber harvesting in these stream systems, particularly the resilience of stream biota to harvestingrelated stream conditions.
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