Abstract
A large experimental channel was used to examine the responses of benthic invertebrate communities to artificial flushes. Two artificial flushes were done at a 20-day interval with a 2-fold difference in peak discharge and duration between them. The effects of the flushes on macroinvertebrates were monitored by comparing the abundance of individual taxa, taxon richness, diversity measures, and similarity indices. Taxon richness and abundances of invertebrates were drastically reduced by every flush. However, the diversity of invertebrates was not significantly reduced by the flushes, and the composition was similar before and after each flush. The fast recruitment of some taxa, having short life cycles, reduced the diversity of invertebrates in the interval between the two flushes. The flushes caused significant reductions in the abundance of epiphytes and fauna living in the streambed. The fauna more resistant to flushes were invertebrates that fasten their cases or retreats by silk threads to substrata. Taxa living in sediment under stones and having a sucking apparatus were also resistant to flushes.
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