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Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

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Page 1: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Biomonitoring

the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Page 2: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Benthic macroinvertebrates Benthic = Live on or in bottom

substrate Macro = Large enough to be seen

with unaided eye Invertebrate = Animal without a

backbone

Page 3: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Why study macroinvertebrates? Affected by the physical, chemical

and biological conditions of stream Can’t escape pollution - show the

effects of short and long-term pollution events

Can show the cumulative impacts of pollution

May show the impacts of habitat loss

Page 4: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Why study macroinvertebrates? Critical part of the stream’s food

web Relatively easy to sample and

identify (easier than algae) Have greater diversity in stream

than fish - sport fishing, stocking of fish and exotic species have altered fish community

Page 5: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

IDENTIFICATION

Page 6: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Key identification features Overall body shape (NOT SIZE) Case made of sticks, leaves, stone Legs Presence and location of gills Presence and location of cerci (“tails”) Head capsule, unusual appendages Movement (crawl; swim side-to-side, up-

down)

Page 7: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Body shape

Page 8: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Case

Page 9: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Legs and prolegs

Caddis removed from case

Prolegs on midge

Page 10: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Gills

Mayfly (Speckle-Winged Quill, Callibaetis)

Page 11: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Cerci (tails)

Baetis has center tail that is ½ length of outer tails

Page 12: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Head capsule

Page 13: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Stoneflies (Plecoptera) Sensitive

Nymphs: Two distinct "tails" called cerci, which are actually

sensory feelers Usual movement = crawl; swim side-side Insect nymphs with three pair of jointed legs,

each with paired claws. Two pair of wing pads (developing wings) present

on thorax. No gills along abdomen Length up to 3 inches

Page 14: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Stonefly nymph (Golden stone)

Page 15: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Stoneflies (Plecoptera) Sensitive

Feeding types: Predator Shredder Omnivore

Adults: resemble nymphs, but possess a long pair of wings

folded down the length of the body.

Eaten by a variety of fish species

Page 16: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Stonefly adult (Little Yellow Stone)

Page 17: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Mayflies (Ephemeroptera) Sensitive

Nymphs: Three tails, occasionally two Gills usually visible on abdomen Typical movement = crawl, swim (up-

down) Small - Total length < 1 inch

Page 18: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Mayfly nymph (Pale Evening Dun)

Head is widest part of body

Page 19: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Mayfly nymph (Small Yellow May)

Nymph with only two tails

Head is widest part of body

Page 20: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Mayflies (Ephemeroptera) Sensitive

Feeding Types: Collector-Gatherers Scrapers

Adults: Resemble nymphs with two pair of long, lacy wings

folded upright Adults usually have only two tails (cerci)

Food for fish and predatory macroinvertebrates

Page 21: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Mayfly adult

Page 22: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Mayfly adult (Hexagenia)

Page 23: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Caddisflies (Tricoptera) Sensitive

Larvae: Soft “worm-like”bodies Head contains a hard covering Larvae are known for their construction of

hollow cases that they either carry with them or attach to rocks built from twigs or bark, small stones, or rolled leaves used for protection and pupation

Anal hooks usually present Large - Length up to 2 inches

Page 24: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Caddisfly larvae w/ caseOctober caddis

Page 25: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

“Free-living” CaddisflySpotted sedge

Branched gills on abdomen

Page 26: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Caddisflies (Tricoptera) Sensitive

Feeding Types: Predators Grazers Collector-Gatherers

Adults: “Moth-like”; usually nocturnal Wings fold into “tent” on back

Eaten by fish and by some macroinvert predators

Collector-FilterersScrapersShredders

Page 27: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Caddisfly adult (October caddis)

Page 28: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Water Pennies (Coleoptera)Sensitive

Circular-shaped Attach firmly to

rocks Sensitive – need

high oxygen and fast flowing water

Page 29: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

MegalopteraSensitive

Dobsonfly/ hellgrammites (Corydalidae) Large mandibles 2 short “tails” Predator

Alderfly (Sialidae) Long, single “tail” Predator

                                                                                        

Page 30: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

OdonataWide range

Damselfly 3 fan-shaped

caudal gills

Dragonfly Robust body Well-developed

“jaws”

Page 31: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Crayfish (Decapoda)Wide Range

4 pairs of walking legs

Large pair of pinchers

Up to 6 inches

Page 32: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Scuds (Amphipoda)Wide Range

“Shrimp-like” 14 feet Prefer muddy

substrate with rooted vegetation

Page 33: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Cranefly (Diptera)Wide Range

Worm-like Head capsule,

usually retracted into “accordion-like” body

Shredders

Page 34: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Midge Larvae (Diptera)Tolerant

Pear-shaped body, with swollen base where they attach

Filter feeders

                                                                                              

Page 35: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Snails (Gastropoda)Tolerant

Cylindrical shell May be right or

left handed

Page 36: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

OthersTolerant

Worms (Oligochaeta) Segmented

bodies

Leeches (Hirundinea) Suckers at both

ends

Page 37: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Identification

Page 38: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Green Rock Worm (Tricoptera)

No case Predator Found in

riffles

Only first thoracic segment has hard shell

Pair of anal hooks

Page 39: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Riffle Beetle (Coleoptera) Hard shelled, tube-

shaped larvae Found in riffles No tails or anal hooks

Gills concealed in chamber at rear of abdomen

Page 40: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Midge Larvae (Diptera) Head

capsule No jointed

legs Variety of

colors Prolegs on

1st thoracic and last abdominal segments

ProlegsProlegs

Page 41: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Data Analysis Data collection is key Level of ID determines level of analysis Score (5) vs. interpretation (“POOR”) Use the same data analysis tool for

comparing data Local-scale tool most accurate

Requires time High quality “reference” sites

Page 42: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Pollution Tolerance Index National-level tool ID to Order 3 groups

Pollution Sensitive (3 pts) Wide Range (2 pts) Pollution Tolerant (1 pt)

Data limited since # organisms not considered

Page 43: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Example PTI calculation

Organism # PTI

Midge (Diptera) 11 1

Scud (Amphipoda) 57 2

Periwinkle (Tricoptera) 3 3

Snails (Gastropoda) 14 1

Waterboatman 5 1

PTI = (1x3)+(1x2)+(3x1) = 8 (POOR)

Page 44: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Hilsenhof Biotic Index (HBI) Considers organic pollution ID to Family or lower 10-point scale where:

0 = most sensitive 10 = most tolerant

# organisms is considered Sometimes included as 1 metric in a

multi-metric analysis, such as IBI

Page 45: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Hilsenhof Biotic Index (HBI)

HBI = (Taxa count) (HBI score)(Total count)

Rating:

0 - 2 2 - 4 4 - 7 7 - 10

CleanSlightly

EnrichedEnriched Polluted

Page 46: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Example HBI calculation

Organism # HBI

Midge (Diptera) 11 8

Scud (Amphipoda) 57 4

Periwinkle (Tricoptera) 3 4

Snails (Gastropoda) 14 7

Waterboatman 5 8

HBI = (11x8)+(57x4)+(3x4)+(14x7)+(5x8)90

HBI = 5.18 (POOR/Enriched)

Page 47: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Biometrics

“Biometric” - a measure of some characteristic of the biological community

Taxa Richness and Composition EPT

Tolerance and Intolerance HBI

Feeding Ecology % or abundance of functional feeding groups

Population Attributes dominance

Page 48: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Family-level metrics Taxa Richness (# diff taxa identified) Mayfly Taxa Stonefly Taxa Caddisfly Taxa % Diptera HBI

Page 49: Biomonitoring the study of biological organisms and their responses to environmental conditions; can be fish, algae or insect communities

Multi-metric indices Include several (usually 5-10)

metrics Combined, they measure various

aspects of stream health Examples:

Index of Biological Integrity (IBI) State of Oregon Multi-metric Index