Cp. Hawkins et Mr. Vinson, Weak correspondence between landscape classifications and stream invertebrate assemblages: implications for bioassessment, J N AMER BE, 19(3), 2000, pp. 501-517
Citations number
27
Categorie Soggetti
Aquatic Sciences
Journal title
JOURNAL OF THE NORTH AMERICAN BENTHOLOGICAL SOCIETY
We examined the ability of 5 a priori landscape classifications (3 sizes of
catchments, ecoregions, and life zones) to partition observed variation in
the composition of stream invertebrate assemblages. Analyses were based on
254 unimpaired sites from montane streams in California and 1912 sites fro
m several regions of the United States. Estimates of classification strengt
h (CS) were used to measure how well classifications partitioned variation
in composition among sites. CS was measured as the difference between overa
ll weighted mean within-class compositional similarity ((W) over bar) and m
ean between-class similarity ((B) over bar). We compared CSs of the 5 a pri
ori classifications with post hoc classification of sites based on cluster
analysis of the pair-wise similarities among sites. The latter, a posterior
i, classification was assumed to represent a near-optimal partitioning of (
W) over bar and (B) over bar, and thus the maximum CS possible. Additional
analyses were conducted to determine if level of taxonomic resolution (genu
s and family) and type of abundance data (presence/absence and log(10) dens
ity) affected CSs.
All CSs, including those based on the post hoc cluster analyses, were weak
with the best classification resulting in only a 14% difference between (W)
over bar and (B) over bar. Classifications in which sites within a class w
ere located relatively close to one another were generally stronger than cl
assifications in which sites were located in geographically noncontiguous c
lasses. Although the type of abundance measure used had little effect on CS
s, classifications based on genus-level identifications were slightly stron
ger than those based on families. In general, these results imply that no c
urrently used landscape classification system can predict stream invertebra
te faunas with much precision. We suspect weak classifications occur becaus
e stream invertebrate taxa appear to vary independently and continuously al
ong environmental gradients, and sites therefore exhibit little tendency to
cluster into discrete groups. Methods of bioassessment that classify sites
into a few discrete groups are therefore likely to be fundamentally limite
d in how precisely they can specify expected conditions, and thus the degre
e of biological impairment that they can detect. Methods that explicitly re
cognize that streams are biological continua may avoid this limitation.