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Stabilization of fine gravels by net-spinning caddisfly larvae

We examined the impact of Hydropsychidae caddisfly larvae on the incipient motion of two sizes of narrowly graded fine-gravel (4–6 and 6–8 mm). This impact was assessed relative to the collective impact of other abiotic and biotic processes that are potentially important conditioning agents of fine-...

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Main Authors: Matthew F. Johnson, Ian Reid, Stephen Rice, Paul Wood
Format: Default Article
Published: 2009
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2134/13027
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author Matthew F. Johnson
Ian Reid
Stephen Rice
Paul Wood
author_facet Matthew F. Johnson
Ian Reid
Stephen Rice
Paul Wood
author_sort Matthew F. Johnson (7190480)
collection Figshare
description We examined the impact of Hydropsychidae caddisfly larvae on the incipient motion of two sizes of narrowly graded fine-gravel (4–6 and 6–8 mm). This impact was assessed relative to the collective impact of other abiotic and biotic processes that are potentially important conditioning agents of fine-gravels. Trays of gravel were placed in the River Soar, Leicestershire, UK, where they were colonized to natural densities by caddisfly larvae. Identical trays that were surrounded by a 250 μm mesh were also deployed, preventing colonization but allowing field conditioning of sediments, including minor reworking of grains and biofilm development. After 21 days in the river, trays were removed to a laboratory flume where grain entrainment stresses were established. In addition to the colonized and conditioned treatments, critical shear stresses were measured for identical sediments that were not placed in the river (laboratory gravels). Gravels that were colonized by Hydropsychidae required significantly greater shear stresses for entrainment than conditioned trays (p ≤ 0·002), however, there was no significant difference between conditioned and laboratory gravels. This implies that the presence of caddisfly can be a more important influence on fine-gravel stability than some conditioning processes. Shields parameter was compared across treatments and across the two gravel size-fractions using two-way ANOVA. No significant differences or interactions were observed, indicating that 4–6 mm gravel was stabilized to a similar degree as 6–8 mm gravel by conditioning and colonization processes. Our results extend earlier studies in two important ways: (1) entrainment stresses were established for fine gravels that were colonized at natural densities, under natural stream conditions; and (2) the caddisfly effect was measured relative to both field-conditioned and unconditioned laboratory controls. The temporal and spatial distribution of silk-spinning caddisfly larvae suggests that they have the potential to influence fine-sediment mobility in many rivers, worldwide.
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spelling rr-article-94815892009-01-01T00:00:00Z Stabilization of fine gravels by net-spinning caddisfly larvae Matthew F. Johnson (7190480) Ian Reid (1256022) Stephen Rice (1255812) Paul Wood (1255125) Geology not elsewhere classified Other earth sciences not elsewhere classified Ecosystem engineering Hydropsychidae Entrainment threshold Shields parameter Biofilm Earth Sciences not elsewhere classified Geology We examined the impact of Hydropsychidae caddisfly larvae on the incipient motion of two sizes of narrowly graded fine-gravel (4–6 and 6–8 mm). This impact was assessed relative to the collective impact of other abiotic and biotic processes that are potentially important conditioning agents of fine-gravels. Trays of gravel were placed in the River Soar, Leicestershire, UK, where they were colonized to natural densities by caddisfly larvae. Identical trays that were surrounded by a 250 μm mesh were also deployed, preventing colonization but allowing field conditioning of sediments, including minor reworking of grains and biofilm development. After 21 days in the river, trays were removed to a laboratory flume where grain entrainment stresses were established. In addition to the colonized and conditioned treatments, critical shear stresses were measured for identical sediments that were not placed in the river (laboratory gravels). Gravels that were colonized by Hydropsychidae required significantly greater shear stresses for entrainment than conditioned trays (p ≤ 0·002), however, there was no significant difference between conditioned and laboratory gravels. This implies that the presence of caddisfly can be a more important influence on fine-gravel stability than some conditioning processes. Shields parameter was compared across treatments and across the two gravel size-fractions using two-way ANOVA. No significant differences or interactions were observed, indicating that 4–6 mm gravel was stabilized to a similar degree as 6–8 mm gravel by conditioning and colonization processes. Our results extend earlier studies in two important ways: (1) entrainment stresses were established for fine gravels that were colonized at natural densities, under natural stream conditions; and (2) the caddisfly effect was measured relative to both field-conditioned and unconditioned laboratory controls. The temporal and spatial distribution of silk-spinning caddisfly larvae suggests that they have the potential to influence fine-sediment mobility in many rivers, worldwide. 2009-01-01T00:00:00Z Text Journal contribution 2134/13027 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Stabilization_of_fine_gravels_by_net-spinning_caddisfly_larvae/9481589 CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
spellingShingle Geology not elsewhere classified
Other earth sciences not elsewhere classified
Ecosystem engineering
Hydropsychidae
Entrainment threshold
Shields parameter
Biofilm
Earth Sciences not elsewhere classified
Geology
Matthew F. Johnson
Ian Reid
Stephen Rice
Paul Wood
Stabilization of fine gravels by net-spinning caddisfly larvae
title Stabilization of fine gravels by net-spinning caddisfly larvae
title_full Stabilization of fine gravels by net-spinning caddisfly larvae
title_fullStr Stabilization of fine gravels by net-spinning caddisfly larvae
title_full_unstemmed Stabilization of fine gravels by net-spinning caddisfly larvae
title_short Stabilization of fine gravels by net-spinning caddisfly larvae
title_sort stabilization of fine gravels by net-spinning caddisfly larvae
topic Geology not elsewhere classified
Other earth sciences not elsewhere classified
Ecosystem engineering
Hydropsychidae
Entrainment threshold
Shields parameter
Biofilm
Earth Sciences not elsewhere classified
Geology
url https://hdl.handle.net/2134/13027