Abstract

1. Trichoptera is an ecologically and taxonomically diverse order, and caddisfly species are under increasing pressure from anthropogenic threats to larval habitats, rivers, and streams.2. This study evaluated long‐term changes in caddisfly communities of the Ogeechee River, a subtropical blackwater river in the south‐eastern U.S. Coastal Plain, to understand how changes manifest as a result of ongoing human impacts. Two datasets separated by more than 30 years were used, each representing a 2‐year monthly quantitative sampling effort (1981–1983; 2015–2017).3. Community structure of the Ogeechee River caddisflies significantly changed, though not in ways that were predicted. The average sensitivity values of the caddisfly community declined, contrary to the expectation that increasing human impacts on a river ecosystem would promote the survival of more pollution‐tolerant taxa.4. Generic richness increased in the 2010s from the 1980s, perhaps as a result of relaxed competition following declines of large, dominant taxa. The increases in various taxa have resulted in similar overall abundance metrics between time periods, although other studies of Ogeechee River invertebrates indicate that the biomass of the new taxa is far lower than that produced by the assemblages of the 1980s. Functional richness, evenness, and dispersion were higher in the 2010s, but divergence was not.5. This suggests that more nuanced monitoring efforts, focused on the threats to ecological function and the role of caddisflies (and other sensitive freshwater organisms), will be required to evaluate the changes in community structure and determine which taxa are most adversely affected.

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