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Pathways for algal recolonisation in ephemeral streams

conference contribution
posted on 2005-01-01, 00:00 authored by Belinda Robson, Ty MatthewsTy Matthews, Peter Lind
Our prior research showed that stream algae regrow rapidly from dry biofilm and suggested that ephemeral streams that lacked any permanent surface water showed much lower algal regrowth once streams recommenced flow. To determine whether the latter was true in a broader range of streams, we: sampled and cultured algae from a range of drought refuges in 9 streams, sampled algae from 18 streams in the week after flow recommenced and conducted a transplant experiment to identify the source of algal colonists. We found little specificity amongst algal taxa for different drought refuges and that the dry biofilm and leaf litter combined accounted for all taxa that regrew after flows recommenced. Regulation of streams with some permanent surface water is associated with increased algal regrowth from dry biofilm, not the presence of permanent surface water alone. Sources of algal recolonization may be dependent on the dominant algal composition within the stream, at a coarse taxonomic level.

History

Event

New Zealand Ecological Society Conference (2005 : Nelson, N.Z.)

Publisher

New Zealand Freshwater Sciences Society

Location

Nelson, N.Z.

Place of publication

[Nelson, N.Z.]

Start date

2005-08-28

End date

2005-09-01

Language

eng

Notes

Conference Program : http://www.nzes.org.nz/sites/all/files/NZESconf2005Nelson.pdf

Publication classification

E3 Extract of paper

Title of proceedings

NZES 2005 : Proceedings of the Conference : Ecology at the waters edge : Joint conference with the New Zealand Freshwater Sciences Society

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