Physical Habitat Structure in Danish Lowland Streams

Morten Lauge Pedersen, Nikolai Friberg, Søren Erik Larsen

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

15 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

 

Dredging or channelization has physically modified the majority (90%) of the 64 000 km of Danish stream network with substantial habitat degradation as a result. Analyses of physical habitat structure in streams, biota, catchment features and regional differences in hydrology, topography and geology have never been carried out in Denmark. Therefore, there is little knowledge of processes, interactions and patterns across the different scales. Physical habitats, catchment parameters and macroinvertebrates were sampled at 39 sites in three major river systems during summer and winter 1993.

In-stream physical conditions and catchment attributes affect the physical habitat structure in Danish lowland streams. Local differences in hydrology, land use, catchment topography and soil types correlated to the in-stream physical habitat parameters. Local differences in hydrology and topography resulted in a separation of the Suså streams with respect to physical habitats. Mud deposition was pronounced at sites with low discharge and low near-bed current velocity. Low mud cover was primarily associated with streams with high discharge located in pristine catchments. Stability in the streams was therefore closely linked to in-stream deposition of fine sediment. Generally, macroinvertebrate community diversity increased as discharge increased. Mud cover negatively affected macroinvertebrate diversity and EPT taxon richness.

Regional physical habitat structure and macroinvertebrate community structure were primarily associated with local variations in hydrology, geology and topography. Low-energy streams were primarily located in the Suså river system and the highenergy streams in the Gudenå and Storå river systems, leading to extensive deposition of mud during summer. Streams in the Suså river system generally had lower diversity and species richness compared to the streams in the Gudenå and Storå river systems.

Hydraulic conditions and substratum dynamics in streams are important when managing lowland streams. This study therefore analyzed interactions and parameter correlations between physical habitats, stream stability and catchment attributes as well as macroinvertebrate community structure across multiple scales.

Original languageEnglish
JournalRivers Research and Applications: an international journal devoted to river research and management
Volume20
Issue number6
Pages (from-to)653–669
Number of pages17
ISSN1535-1459
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30 Jun 2004
Externally publishedYes

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