4.6 Article

Crayfish as geomorphic agents and ecosystem engineers: effect of a biomass gradient on baseflow and flood-induced transport of gravel and sand in experimental streams

Journal

FRESHWATER BIOLOGY
Volume 48, Issue 1, Pages 147-163

Publisher

BLACKWELL PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2427.2003.00984.x

Keywords

bioturbation; critical shear stress; lotic benthos; patch dynamics; physical habitat

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1. Using experimental streams, we studied the impact of the crayfish Orconectes limosus on (i) the transport of gravel and sand at baseflow; (ii) the sediment surface (bedform, particle consolidation, proportion of sand, algal and gravel cover); and (iii) the critical shear stress (tau(C)) causing incipient gravel and sand motion during simulated floods. We examined ( i) and ( ii) in experimental outdoor flumes that replicated riffle-pool sequences and ( iii) in a larger laboratory flume, in which we exposed sediments retrieved from the outdoor flumes to a progressively increasing discharge. 2. Habitat changes induced by crayfish, such as bedform alterations in riffles ( downstream displacement of riffle heads) and the increase of gravel on sand dunes in pools, had major impacts on the spatial and temporal patterns of the baseflow transport of gravel and sand. 3. In addition to their impact on bedform in riffles and on gravel cover in pools, crayfish prevented the physical consolidation of particles in riffles and reduced the algal cover and the proportion of sand in the surface layer in both riffles and pools. These crayfish impacts on sediment surface variables had complex, interacting effects on the mobilisation of gravel and sand during subsequent flood simulations. For sand, crayfish progressively decreased the tau(C) ( i. e. the sum of bedform drag and skin friction) by about 50% along the entire biomass gradient in pools, whereas the presence of crayfish abruptly decreased the tau(C) by about 75% in riffles. For gravel, the discharge causing motion in riffles produced a shear stress ( in terms of skin friction) on an even bedform that was about 75% lower in all flumes with crayfish compared with the flumes without crayfish. Crayfish had no impact on tau(C) for gravel in pools. 4. Scaling-up these experimental results to real streams suggests that crayfish could affect the patch dynamics of major sediment transport events and habitat suitability for other organisms that, at larger spatial scales, could increase the overall spatio-temporal habitat diversity and thus the overall structural and functional biodiversity of lotic communities.

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