176 research outputs found
Use of a Statistical Technique for Recommending Sample Size in Collecting Benthic Macroinvertebrate Populations
COMPARISON OF ENERGY FLOW PARAMETERS OF MIDGE POPULATIONS IN BIOLOGICAL OXIDATION PONDS (Effect of Phenol on Oxygen Uptake Rate of a Laboratory Population of Chironomus Attenuatus (Walk.) 1,2)
The Effects of pH, Phenol, and Sodium Chloride on the Bioenergetics of Laboratory Populations of Chironomus Attenuatus
Technical Completion Report on Biological Evaluation of Best Practicable and Best Available Treatment Control Technology for Petroleum Refinery Wastewaters
Alteration of macroinvertebrate community in tropical aquatic systems in relation to sediment redox potential and overlaying water quality
Limnological studies in two tropical Indian aquatic habitats showed
that macroinvertebrate communities have greater diversity than other
biotic communities present there. Sediment redox potential is found to
be an important factor for alteration of macroinvertebrate communities
in aquatic bodies. Anthropogenic activities have influenced the
changing of sediment redox potential values of the studied sites and
there by affected the macroinvertebrate communities
The rate of colonization by macro-invertebrates on artificial substrate samplers
The influence of exposure time upon macro-invertebrate colonization on modified Hester-Dendy substrate samplers was investigated over a 60-day period. The duration of exposure affected the number of individuals, taxa and community diversity. The numbers of individuals colonizing the samplers reached a maximum after 39 days and then began to decrease, due to the emergence of adult insects. Coefficients of variation for the four replicate samples retrieved each sampling day fluctuated extensively throughout the study. No tendencies toward increasing or decreasing coefficients of variation were noted with increasing time of sampler exposure. The number of taxa colonizing the samplers increased throughout the study period. The community diversity index was calculated for each sampling day and this function tended to increase throughout the same period. This supports the hypothesis that an exposure period of 6 weeks, as recommended by the United States Environmental Protection Agency, may not always provide adequate opportunity for a truly representative community of macro-invertebrates to colonize multiplate samplers. Many of the taxa were collected in quite substantial proportions after periods of absence or extreme sparseness. This is attributed to the growth of periphyton and the collection of other materials that created food and new habitats suitable for the colonization of new taxa. Investigation of the relationship between ‘equitability’ and length of exposure revealed that equitability did not vary like diversity with increased time of exposure.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/72073/1/j.1365-2427.1979.tb01522.x.pd
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