THE DISTRIBUTION OF DIPPERS, CINCLUS-CINCLUS (L.), IN THE ACID-SENSITIVE REGION OF WALES, 1984-95

Citation
St. Buckton et al., THE DISTRIBUTION OF DIPPERS, CINCLUS-CINCLUS (L.), IN THE ACID-SENSITIVE REGION OF WALES, 1984-95, Freshwater Biology, 39(2), 1998, pp. 387-396
Citations number
39
Categorie Soggetti
Marine & Freshwater Biology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00465070
Volume
39
Issue
2
Year of publication
1998
Pages
387 - 396
Database
ISI
SICI code
0046-5070(1998)39:2<387:TDODC(>2.0.ZU;2-B
Abstract
1. Dippers were surveyed along seventy-four acid-sensitive streams in upland Wales in 1984 and again in 1995. At forty-eight of the sites, a nd in an additional twenty-three to twenty-nine adjacent catchments, c hanges in acid-base status and macroinvertebrate communities were asse ssed. River habitat surveys (RHS) and GIS (Geographical Information Sy stem) provided information on habitat features. 2. pH means across all the sites were higher on average by 0.12 pH units in 1995 than 1984, accompanied by significantly increased total hardness and reduced sulp hate. However, geometric mean aluminium concentrations increased signi ficantly, while the abundances of important dipper prey either remaine d constant (Ephemeroptera) or declined (Trichoptera; Plecoptera). 3. A s in 1984, dipper distribution in 1995 was related to acid-base status : aluminium concentrations were significantly higher, and pH significa ntly lower, at sites where dippers were absent. In both surveys, there were significantly more bankside broadleaves and fewer conifers where dippers were present. 4. Although dippers occurred in 1995 on a simil ar number of streams as in 1984, there were both gains and losses, and an overall significant reduction in the number of visits on which bir ds were recorded (= registrations) per survey reach. Gains and losses were not related to habitat structure or acid-base status, and might b e stochastic. Mean aluminium concentrations increased more (P < 0.06) at sites where dipper registrations fell, than where they increased, b ut changes were large enough to explain altered occupancy at only five sites. Plecopteran abundances declined most at sites losing birds. 5. We conclude that recovery from acidification has not yet been large o r sustained enough to allow widescale increase in the Welsh dipper pop ulation, and continued decline cannot be excluded. There is a need for better understanding of how recovery processes will permeate foodwebs to reach top predators in acidified streams, and of the geographical scale of recovery required to increase populations in dispersed organi sms such as birds. Such uncertainties, together with the mismatch in t rends revealed by stream chemistry and dippers, illustrate reasons why chemical data alone are inadequate for the assessment of changing riv er quality.