Coastal Restoration Trust of New Zealand

Coastal Dune Ecosystem Reference Database

Sedimentation effects on the benthos of streams and estuaries: a cross-ecosystem comparison Journal Paper

Author
Reid, D.J., Chiaroni, L.D., Hewitt, J.E., Lohrer, A.M., Matthaei, C.D., Phillips, N.R., Scarsbrooke, M.R., Smith, B.R., Thrush, S.F., Townsend, C.R., van Houte-Howes, K.S., Wright-Stow, A.E.
Year
2011
Journal / Source
Marine and Freshwater Research
Publisher / Organisation
CSIRO PUBLISHING
Volume
62
Pages
1201–1213
Keywords
benthic, community structure, integrated catchment management, land use, species traits
Summary
Connected ecosystems can be detrimentally affected by the same stressor, such as occurs when excess fine sediment moves from streams into estuaries. However, no previous study has directly compared sedimentation effects across these ecosystems. Responses of benthic macroinvertebrate communities to sedimentation were predicted to vary between streams and estuaries, because of intersystem differences in the physical environment and representation of species traits. To compare these responses, fine terrigenous sediment was added simultaneously to replicated plots in stream-run habitats and the adjacent estuary. Although sediment addition to streams caused reduced invertebrate densities after 1 week, no changes in taxon richness or consistent changes in community structure were detected, and densities had recovered another week later. In contrast, sediment addition to estuarine sites caused large declines in invertebrate densities and changes in community structure, which remained evident at the innermost sites 16 days after addition. Across both systems, sedimentation effects were detectable only for some of the common taxa, and biological traits were not predictive of effects. The potential for more severe effects in estuaries should be considered when predicting the implications of land-use changes that may increase sedimentation, and when setting guidelines for maintaining stream and estuarine condition.