INALI   02622
INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE LIMNOLOGIA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Fine Sediment Input and Benthic Fauna Interactions at the Confluence of Two Large Rivers
Autor/es:
AMSLER MARIO; EZCURRA DE DRAGO INES; PAIRA ALDO; ESPINOLA LUIS; BLETTLER MARTIN; SZUPIANY RICARDO; DRAGO EDMUNDO; EBERLE ELIANA
Revista:
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Editorial:
UNIV TEHRAN
Referencias:
Lugar: Tehran; Año: 2016 vol. 10 p. 65 - 76
ISSN:
1735-6865
Resumen:
Several studies suggest that invertebrate abundance and richness are disrupted and reset at confluences. Thus, junctions contribute disproportionately to the overall aquatic biodiversity of the river. In general terms, authors have reported high abundance and diversity due to the major physical heterogeneity atjunctions. However, data are still scarce and uncertainties are plentiful. The impact of a great input of fine sediments on the distribution patterns of benthic invertebrates at a river confluence was quantitatively analyzed herein. The junction of the subtropical Bermejo River (high suspended sediment load) with the large Paraguay River is the selected study area to achieve this aim. While diversity increased slightly downstream the junction (from 0.21 to 0.36), density and richness of the macroinvertebrate assemblage significantly diminished downstream the confluence (from 29050 to 410 ind/m2; p< 0.05) due to the input of fine sediment from the Bermejo River (mean fine sediment increased downstream from 6.3 to 10.2 mg/L), causing a negatively impact on invertebrate assemblage. This study highlights the ecological importance of the sediment input effects on benthic invertebrates, a topic still poorly explored in river ecology. It is speculated that the spatial extent of the impact would be dependent upon the hydrological and sedimentological context, highly unequal between both rivers. New hypotheses should be tested through new studies considering different hydrological stages.