Longitudinal zonation of macroinvertebrates in an Ecuadorian glacier-fed stream : do tropical glacial systems fit the temperate model ?

1. The ecology of glacier-fed streams at temperate latitudes has been intensely studied in recent years, leading to the development of a well-validated conceptual model on the longitudinal distribution of macroinvertebrate communities downstream of the glacier margin (Freshwater Biology, 2001a; 46,...

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Main Authors: Jacobsen, D., Dangles, Olivier, Andino, P., Espinosa, R., Hamerlik, L., Cadier, Eric
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010049518
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spelling ftird:oai:ird.fr:fdi:010049518 2023-05-15T15:19:35+02:00 Longitudinal zonation of macroinvertebrates in an Ecuadorian glacier-fed stream : do tropical glacial systems fit the temperate model ? Jacobsen, D. Dangles, Olivier Andino, P. Espinosa, R. Hamerlik, L. Cadier, Eric 2010 http://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010049518 EN eng http://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010049518 oai:ird.fr:fdi:010049518 Jacobsen D., Dangles Olivier, Andino P., Espinosa R., Hamerlik L., Cadier Eric. Longitudinal zonation of macroinvertebrates in an Ecuadorian glacier-fed stream : do tropical glacial systems fit the temperate model ?. Freshwater Biology, 2010, 55 (6), p. 1234-1248. community composition fauna High Andes physical stability water temperature text 2010 ftird 2020-08-21T06:57:09Z 1. The ecology of glacier-fed streams at temperate latitudes has been intensely studied in recent years, leading to the development of a well-validated conceptual model on the longitudinal distribution of macroinvertebrate communities downstream of the glacier margin (Freshwater Biology, 2001a; 46, 1833). However, to our knowledge, the ecology of tropical glacier-fed streams has not yet been studied. 2. We sampled benthic macroinvertebrates and measured environmental variables at nine sites between 4730 and 4225 m altitude along a 4.3 km stretch of a glacier-fed stream 40 km south of the equator in the Ecuadorian Andes. Our goal was to study the longitudinal distribution of the fauna in relation to environmental factors and to compare this with the conceptual model based on temperate-arctic glacier-fed streams. 3. Total density of invertebrates differed considerably at the two highest altitude sites; 4600 m-2 at a pro-glacial lake outlet and only 4 m-2 at a site originating directly from the glacier snout. Otherwise, there was a downstream decrease in density to about 825 m-2 at the three lowest sites. Taxon richness increased with distance from the glacier, very similar to the pattern predicted. A total of 28 taxa were collected; two at the glacier snout, seven at the nearby pro-glacial lake outlet, 13 at site 2 (< 400 m from the glacier) and 20 at the lowest sites. 4. The numerical percentage of Chironomidae (Diptera) decreased downstream from 100 to 44%. The subfamily Podonominae was numerous at the highest sites but became much less important further downstream. The Orthocladiinae were important both in numbers and species at all sites, while Diamesinae were numerous only in the middle of the reach studied and were completely absent from the upper three sites. The limited importance of the Diamesinae, and its replacement by Podonominae, is different from the pattern typically observed in north-temperate glacier-fed streams. This could be because of the fact that the genus Diamesa is missing from the Neotropics. 5. Stream temperature and channel stability explained most of the variability in faunal composition and richness, supporting the model. Stability increased systematically downstream while temperature did not. Surprisingly, no classical kryal zone (T-max < 4 degrees C) was found, as even the site closest to the glacier snout (50 m) had a T-max of 15 degrees C and no site had T-max < 8 degrees C. We propose that this might be a general feature of equatorial glacial streams. Text Arctic IRD (Institute de recherche pour le développement): Horizon Arctic Glacial Lake ENVELOPE(-129.463,-129.463,58.259,58.259)
institution Open Polar
collection IRD (Institute de recherche pour le développement): Horizon
op_collection_id ftird
language English
topic community composition
fauna
High Andes
physical stability
water
temperature
spellingShingle community composition
fauna
High Andes
physical stability
water
temperature
Jacobsen, D.
Dangles, Olivier
Andino, P.
Espinosa, R.
Hamerlik, L.
Cadier, Eric
Longitudinal zonation of macroinvertebrates in an Ecuadorian glacier-fed stream : do tropical glacial systems fit the temperate model ?
topic_facet community composition
fauna
High Andes
physical stability
water
temperature
description 1. The ecology of glacier-fed streams at temperate latitudes has been intensely studied in recent years, leading to the development of a well-validated conceptual model on the longitudinal distribution of macroinvertebrate communities downstream of the glacier margin (Freshwater Biology, 2001a; 46, 1833). However, to our knowledge, the ecology of tropical glacier-fed streams has not yet been studied. 2. We sampled benthic macroinvertebrates and measured environmental variables at nine sites between 4730 and 4225 m altitude along a 4.3 km stretch of a glacier-fed stream 40 km south of the equator in the Ecuadorian Andes. Our goal was to study the longitudinal distribution of the fauna in relation to environmental factors and to compare this with the conceptual model based on temperate-arctic glacier-fed streams. 3. Total density of invertebrates differed considerably at the two highest altitude sites; 4600 m-2 at a pro-glacial lake outlet and only 4 m-2 at a site originating directly from the glacier snout. Otherwise, there was a downstream decrease in density to about 825 m-2 at the three lowest sites. Taxon richness increased with distance from the glacier, very similar to the pattern predicted. A total of 28 taxa were collected; two at the glacier snout, seven at the nearby pro-glacial lake outlet, 13 at site 2 (< 400 m from the glacier) and 20 at the lowest sites. 4. The numerical percentage of Chironomidae (Diptera) decreased downstream from 100 to 44%. The subfamily Podonominae was numerous at the highest sites but became much less important further downstream. The Orthocladiinae were important both in numbers and species at all sites, while Diamesinae were numerous only in the middle of the reach studied and were completely absent from the upper three sites. The limited importance of the Diamesinae, and its replacement by Podonominae, is different from the pattern typically observed in north-temperate glacier-fed streams. This could be because of the fact that the genus Diamesa is missing from the Neotropics. 5. Stream temperature and channel stability explained most of the variability in faunal composition and richness, supporting the model. Stability increased systematically downstream while temperature did not. Surprisingly, no classical kryal zone (T-max < 4 degrees C) was found, as even the site closest to the glacier snout (50 m) had a T-max of 15 degrees C and no site had T-max < 8 degrees C. We propose that this might be a general feature of equatorial glacial streams.
format Text
author Jacobsen, D.
Dangles, Olivier
Andino, P.
Espinosa, R.
Hamerlik, L.
Cadier, Eric
author_facet Jacobsen, D.
Dangles, Olivier
Andino, P.
Espinosa, R.
Hamerlik, L.
Cadier, Eric
author_sort Jacobsen, D.
title Longitudinal zonation of macroinvertebrates in an Ecuadorian glacier-fed stream : do tropical glacial systems fit the temperate model ?
title_short Longitudinal zonation of macroinvertebrates in an Ecuadorian glacier-fed stream : do tropical glacial systems fit the temperate model ?
title_full Longitudinal zonation of macroinvertebrates in an Ecuadorian glacier-fed stream : do tropical glacial systems fit the temperate model ?
title_fullStr Longitudinal zonation of macroinvertebrates in an Ecuadorian glacier-fed stream : do tropical glacial systems fit the temperate model ?
title_full_unstemmed Longitudinal zonation of macroinvertebrates in an Ecuadorian glacier-fed stream : do tropical glacial systems fit the temperate model ?
title_sort longitudinal zonation of macroinvertebrates in an ecuadorian glacier-fed stream : do tropical glacial systems fit the temperate model ?
publishDate 2010
url http://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010049518
long_lat ENVELOPE(-129.463,-129.463,58.259,58.259)
geographic Arctic
Glacial Lake
geographic_facet Arctic
Glacial Lake
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_relation http://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010049518
oai:ird.fr:fdi:010049518
Jacobsen D., Dangles Olivier, Andino P., Espinosa R., Hamerlik L., Cadier Eric. Longitudinal zonation of macroinvertebrates in an Ecuadorian glacier-fed stream : do tropical glacial systems fit the temperate model ?. Freshwater Biology, 2010, 55 (6), p. 1234-1248.
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