The terrestrial and semi‐aquatic invertebrates of intermittent rivers and ephemeral streams

ABSTRACT Intermittent rivers and ephemeral streams (IRES), which cease flow and/or dry at some point, are the most abundant waterways on earth, and are found on every continent. They can support a diverse, and often abundant, terrestrial and semi‐aquatic invertebrate (TSAI) fauna, which has been poo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 2022-08, Vol.97 (4), p.1408-1425
Hauptverfasser: Steward, Alisha L., Datry, Thibault, Langhans, Simone D.
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creator Steward, Alisha L.
Datry, Thibault
Langhans, Simone D.
description ABSTRACT Intermittent rivers and ephemeral streams (IRES), which cease flow and/or dry at some point, are the most abundant waterways on earth, and are found on every continent. They can support a diverse, and often abundant, terrestrial and semi‐aquatic invertebrate (TSAI) fauna, which has been poorly explored due to its position at the fringe between aquatic and terrestrial disciplines. TSAIs can inhabit a variety of habitat types, including the shoreline, the surface of exposed gravel bars, unsaturated gravels, dry riverbeds, riparian zones, and floodplains. Much less is known about the species composition and ecological roles of TSAIs of IRES than their aquatic counterparts, with TSAIs being largely overlooked in conceptual models, legislation, policy, and ecological monitoring. Herein we review the TSAI literature that has increased substantially over the last decade and present conceptual models describing how TSAIs respond to hydrological changes in IRES. Then, we test these models with data collected during wet and dry phases in IRES from Australia and France. These generic models can be utilised by water managers and policy makers, ensuring that both wet and dry phases are considered in the management and protection of IRES. IRES should be viewed as a habitat continuum through time, with taxa from a pool of aquatic, semi‐aquatic and terrestrial invertebrates inhabiting at any hydrological stage. We call for collaboration among terrestrial and aquatic ecologists to explore these invertebrates and ecosystems further.
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subjects Aquatic animals
Aquatic fauna
Aquatic organisms
Carabidae
Coleoptera
Creeks & streams
Ecological monitoring
Ecology
Environmental Sciences
Ephemeral streams
exposed riverine sediments
Floodplains
Formicidae
Gravel
Hebridae
Hydrology
Invertebrates
Legislation
Literature reviews
Lycosidae
Riparian land
River beds
Rivers
Shorelines
Species composition
Staphylinidae
Streams
taxonomic diversity
terrestrial arthropods
Terrestrial environments
unsaturated sediments
Water management
Waterways
title The terrestrial and semi‐aquatic invertebrates of intermittent rivers and ephemeral streams
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