1. Studies of aquatic insects in the Atna River 1987–2002.
- Author
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Aagaard, Kaare, Solem, John O., Bongard, Terje, and Hanssen, Oddvar
- Subjects
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AQUATIC insects , *AQUATIC invertebrates , *BIOLOGICAL classification , *ANIMAL species , *BIOTIC communities , *RIVERS - Abstract
River Atna is situated in south-eastern Norway and stretches from approx. 1400 m a.s.l. in the Rondane Mountains, through Lake Atnsjøen, at 701 m a.s.l.; to the confluence with River Glomma at 338 m a.s.l. The catchment area is 1323 km2, oligotrophic and very susceptible to acid precipitation. The river water is very poor in nutrients and ions, and pH varies from 5.0 to 7.2. Samples were taken each year from 1987 to 2002 at three to five localities from 1280 to 380 m a.s.l. Insect larvae were collected by Surber sampling and by kick sampling. Malaise traps were used to collect adults of Plecoptera, Trichoptera, Chironomidae and Limoniidae. A total of 16 taxa of Ephemeroptera, 24 taxa of Plecoptera, 39 taxa of Trichoptera, 125 taxa of Chironomidae and 52 taxa of Limoniidae, were identified. Our results from Atna provide some support for a zonation of the river based on zoobenthos. The occurrence and abundance of functional groups among the Plecoptera, Trichoptera, and Chironomidae are discussed in relation to the River Continuum Concept (RCC). Our conclusion is that grazers dominate in the zoobenthos in streams in the treeless alpine region in Norway. Natural lakes, which occur in most watercourses in Norway, appear to cause a disturbance in relation to the original RCC concept, as the zoobenthos community in and below the lake outlet is dominated by collectors (filter feeders). The pattern found in the Atna watercourse is probably a general pattern for a northern watercourse in the Holarctic, where the glacial periods created lakes in most watercourses. The results of the long term sampling in Atna are discussed in relation to the practicalities and the cost-benefit of zoobenthos in efficient bio-monitoring in rivers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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