Tuesday, May 19, 2009
274

Summer-dry stream invertebrates in a western Oregon lowland landscape

William J. Gerth, Judith L. Li, and Guillermo R. Giannico. Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Oregon State University, 104 Nash Hall, Corvallis, OR 97331

Seasonal rainfall in western Oregon causes many lowland streams to flow during the wet-season, but they are generally dry during summer and autumn. In the southern Willamette Valley much of the land surrounding summer-dry streams is cultivated for grass seed production; thus watersheds not influenced by agricultural land-use are rare. Stream bottoms are primarily hard clay with varying amounts of rooted vegetation. Our paper summarizes 3 years of sampling in these agriculturally-influenced streams. Invertebrate densities from an initial area-wide survey were positively correlated with the amount of stream bottom vegetation. We subsequently sampled paired vegetated-unvegetated sections within 4 streams; the pattern of invertebrate density increasing with more in-channel rooted vegetation was confirmed. In these streams invertebrate assemblages were comprised primarily of non-insects, but some insects, including EPT taxa, were present. Sites to the east of the Willamette River, where watershed agricultural land-use was higher, had lower taxa richness and greater proportional abundances of oligochaetes. Site west of the Willamette had less intense agricultural land-use, higher taxa richness and generally had several EPT taxa. Reference sites, located in wildlife refuges and conservation units, exhibited similar characteristics to the latter, less disturbed sites.


Web Page: summer-dry, agriculture, invertebrates