1. Maintenance of agricultural drains alters physical habitat, but not macroinvertebrate assemblages exploited by fishes
- Author
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Belinda Ward-Campbell, Karl Cottenie, Robert L. McLaughlin, and Nicholas E. Mandrak
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Environmental Engineering ,Watershed ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Predation ,Rivers ,Abundance (ecology) ,Animals ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Ecosystem ,Invertebrate ,Ontario ,Hydrology ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,fungi ,Fishes ,General Medicine ,Vegetation ,Invertebrates ,Habitat ,Benthic zone ,Environmental science ,Species richness ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
The effects of drain maintenance on fish habitat and benthic macroinvertebrate assemblages (fish prey) were investigated for eight agricultural drains in southwestern Ontario, Canada. Our investigation employed a replicated Before-After-Control-Impact (BACI) design where each maintained section of a drain was paired with an unmaintained section downstream and an unmaintained section on a nearby reference drain of similar size and position in the watershed. Seven variables characterizing physical habitat features important to fishes and three variables characterizing the taxonomic abundance, densities, and relative densities of benthic macroinvertebrates were measured before drain maintenance and 10-12 times over 2 years following maintenance. Pulse responses were detected for three habitat variables quantifying vegetative cover: percent vegetation on the bank, percent in-stream vegetation, and percent cover. All three variables returned to pre-maintenance levels within two years of maintenance. No consistent changes were observed in the remaining habitat features or in the richness and densities of benthic invertebrate assemblages following drain maintenance. Our findings suggest that key features of fish habitat, structural properties and food availability, are resistant to drain maintenance.
- Published
- 2017