Estimates of resource transfer via winged adult insects from the hyporheic zone in a gravel‐bed river

Abstract Hyporheic zone (HZ) locates below the riverbed providing habitat for macroinvertebrates from where the winged adult insects (i.e., hyporheic insects, HIs) emerge and bring out aquatic resources to the riparian zone. This study estimated mean daily flux as dry biomass (BM), carbon (C), and n...

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Main Authors: Mirza A. T. M. Tanvir Rahman, Junjiro N. Negishi, Takumi Akasaka, Futoshi Nakamura
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-05-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7366
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spelling doaj-6e4740f489004d3d9128b4823108043d2021-05-04T06:13:21ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582021-05-011194656466910.1002/ece3.7366Estimates of resource transfer via winged adult insects from the hyporheic zone in a gravel‐bed riverMirza A. T. M. Tanvir Rahman0Junjiro N. Negishi1Takumi Akasaka2Futoshi Nakamura3Laboratory of Watershed Conservation and Management, Graduate School of Environmental Science Hokkaido University Sapporo JapanLaboratory of Watershed Conservation and Management, Faculty of Environmental Earth Science Hokkaido University Sapporo JapanLaboratory of Conservation Ecology, Department of Agriculture and Animal Science Obihiro University of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine Obihiro JapanLaboratory of Ecosystem Management, Research Faculty of Agriculture Hokkaido University Sapporo JapanAbstract Hyporheic zone (HZ) locates below the riverbed providing habitat for macroinvertebrates from where the winged adult insects (i.e., hyporheic insects, HIs) emerge and bring out aquatic resources to the riparian zone. This study estimated mean daily flux as dry biomass (BM), carbon (C), and nitrogen (N) deriving from the dominant HI species Alloperla ishikariana (Plecoptera, Chloroperlidae) for a 4th‐order gravel‐bed river during the early‐summer to summer periods. We hypothesized that HIs were an important contributor in total aquatic resources to the riparian zone. In 2017 and 2018, we set parallelly (May to August) and perpendicularly (June to October) oriented Malaise traps to catch the lateral and longitudinal directional dispersing winged adults of A. ishikariana, and other Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera, Trichoptera, and Diptera from the river and estimated the directional fluxes of them. We further split the directional fluxes as moving away or back to the channel (for lateral) and from down‐ to upstream or up‐ to downstream (for longitudinal). Alloperla ishikariana was similar to other Plecoptera species and differed clearly from Ephemeroptera and Trichoptera in directional characteristics of resources flux, suggesting that the extent and directions of HZ‐derived resource transfer depend on taxon‐specific flight behaviors of HIs. Contributions of A. ishikariana to the riparian zone in total aquatic C and N transfer seasonally varied and were lower in May (5%–6%) and August (2%–4%) and the highest in July (52%–70%). These conservative estimates largely increased (9% in May) after the supplementary inclusion of Diptera (Chironomidae and Tipulidae), part of which were considered HIs. We demonstrated that HZ could seasonally contribute a significant portion of aquatic resources to the riparian zone and highlighted the potential importance of HZ in nutrient balance in the river‐riparian ecosystem.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7366dispersalPlecopteraresource transferriparian zonesubsurface interface
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mirza A. T. M. Tanvir Rahman
Junjiro N. Negishi
Takumi Akasaka
Futoshi Nakamura
spellingShingle Mirza A. T. M. Tanvir Rahman
Junjiro N. Negishi
Takumi Akasaka
Futoshi Nakamura
Estimates of resource transfer via winged adult insects from the hyporheic zone in a gravel‐bed river
Ecology and Evolution
dispersal
Plecoptera
resource transfer
riparian zone
subsurface interface
author_facet Mirza A. T. M. Tanvir Rahman
Junjiro N. Negishi
Takumi Akasaka
Futoshi Nakamura
author_sort Mirza A. T. M. Tanvir Rahman
title Estimates of resource transfer via winged adult insects from the hyporheic zone in a gravel‐bed river
title_short Estimates of resource transfer via winged adult insects from the hyporheic zone in a gravel‐bed river
title_full Estimates of resource transfer via winged adult insects from the hyporheic zone in a gravel‐bed river
title_fullStr Estimates of resource transfer via winged adult insects from the hyporheic zone in a gravel‐bed river
title_full_unstemmed Estimates of resource transfer via winged adult insects from the hyporheic zone in a gravel‐bed river
title_sort estimates of resource transfer via winged adult insects from the hyporheic zone in a gravel‐bed river
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Abstract Hyporheic zone (HZ) locates below the riverbed providing habitat for macroinvertebrates from where the winged adult insects (i.e., hyporheic insects, HIs) emerge and bring out aquatic resources to the riparian zone. This study estimated mean daily flux as dry biomass (BM), carbon (C), and nitrogen (N) deriving from the dominant HI species Alloperla ishikariana (Plecoptera, Chloroperlidae) for a 4th‐order gravel‐bed river during the early‐summer to summer periods. We hypothesized that HIs were an important contributor in total aquatic resources to the riparian zone. In 2017 and 2018, we set parallelly (May to August) and perpendicularly (June to October) oriented Malaise traps to catch the lateral and longitudinal directional dispersing winged adults of A. ishikariana, and other Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera, Trichoptera, and Diptera from the river and estimated the directional fluxes of them. We further split the directional fluxes as moving away or back to the channel (for lateral) and from down‐ to upstream or up‐ to downstream (for longitudinal). Alloperla ishikariana was similar to other Plecoptera species and differed clearly from Ephemeroptera and Trichoptera in directional characteristics of resources flux, suggesting that the extent and directions of HZ‐derived resource transfer depend on taxon‐specific flight behaviors of HIs. Contributions of A. ishikariana to the riparian zone in total aquatic C and N transfer seasonally varied and were lower in May (5%–6%) and August (2%–4%) and the highest in July (52%–70%). These conservative estimates largely increased (9% in May) after the supplementary inclusion of Diptera (Chironomidae and Tipulidae), part of which were considered HIs. We demonstrated that HZ could seasonally contribute a significant portion of aquatic resources to the riparian zone and highlighted the potential importance of HZ in nutrient balance in the river‐riparian ecosystem.
topic dispersal
Plecoptera
resource transfer
riparian zone
subsurface interface
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7366
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