Influence of invasive crayfish on fine sediment transport, ingress and bed storage in lowland rivers

Historically it has been assumed that abiotic forces dominate fluvial sediment dynamics. However, a growing body of work indicates that biological energy can also exert a significant control over sediment dynamics. The role that invasive species may play in altering fine sediment dynamics is particu...

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Veröffentlicht in:River research and applications 2022-10, Vol.38 (8), p.1481-1494
Hauptverfasser: Mathers, Kate L., Rice, Stephen P., Chadd, Richard, Wood, Paul J.
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creator Mathers, Kate L.
Rice, Stephen P.
Chadd, Richard
Wood, Paul J.
description Historically it has been assumed that abiotic forces dominate fluvial sediment dynamics. However, a growing body of work indicates that biological energy can also exert a significant control over sediment dynamics. The role that invasive species may play in altering fine sediment dynamics is particularly pertinent given that any influence may disrupt the natural equilibrium of the ecosystem. Here we investigated the effect of invasive signal crayfish (Pacisfastcus leniusculus) on the transport and storage of fine sediment in a densely populated river compared with a nearby control river without crayfish, over an 18‐week period. We observed clear evidence of diurnal fluctuations in turbidity associated with crayfish presence including periodograms with power peaks at a period of 1 day. Fine sediment fluxes indicated that crayfish contributed on average 18.5% extra to baseflow loads than would be likely under abiotic forcing alone. Temporal variations in suspended sediment concentrations were also observed at the control site but these were different in character and exhibited no clear temporal pattern or consistency as confirmed by periodogram analysis. Crayfish did not have an effect on sediment ingress rates relative to the control site and, at the crayfish site, the reach scale sediment budget was in net equilibrium during the sampling period. Our results provide further evidence that biological energy alters riverine fine sediment dynamics and warrants consideration in sediment dynamic models.
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Temporal variations in suspended sediment concentrations were also observed at the control site but these were different in character and exhibited no clear temporal pattern or consistency as confirmed by periodogram analysis. Crayfish did not have an effect on sediment ingress rates relative to the control site and, at the crayfish site, the reach scale sediment budget was in net equilibrium during the sampling period. 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subjects Abiotic factors
Base flow
biogeomorphology
Crayfish
Diurnal variations
Dynamic models
Dynamics
ecosystem engineers
Fluvial sediments
Freshwater crustaceans
ingress
Introduced species
Invasive species
Loads (forces)
non‐native
Pacifastacus leniusculus
Population density
Rivers
Sediment
sediment budget
Sediment concentration
Sediment dynamics
sediment fluxes
Sediment transport
Sediments
signal crayfish
Storage
Suspended sediments
Temporal variations
Turbidity
zoogeomorphology
title Influence of invasive crayfish on fine sediment transport, ingress and bed storage in lowland rivers
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