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Journal ArticleDOI

A Comparison of Longitudinal Patterns in Hyporheic and Benthic Oligochaete Assemblages in a Glacial River

TLDR
In this paper, the authors examined the longitudinal pattern of oligochaetes in the hyporheic and benthic layers of a glacial river (Val Roseg, Switzerland).
Abstract
This paper examines the longitudinal pattern of oligochaetes in the hyporheic and benthic layers of a glacial river (Val Roseg, Switzerland). We hypothesized that the spatial distribution of oligochaete communities would reflect changes in surface water/groundwater interactions along the river continuum. From June to November 1997 (4 dates), three hyporheic and three benthic samples were collected at 11 and 9 sites, respectively, located over a distance of 11 km from the glacier terminus. A two-ended member mixing model based on concentrations of sodium was used to determine changes in the relative proportions of glacial water and groundwater along the river. The longitudinal increase in the diversity and abundance of hyporheic assemblages of oligochaetes was closely linked to the convergence of groundwater and surface glacial water. The differential distribution of hyporheic and benthic assemblages suggested that the hyporheic corridor acted as the main upstream migration pathway for oligochaetes. In this glacial river, the hyporheic zone appeared as a source area from which benthic habitats presenting suitable environmental conditions could be colonized.

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Emerging concepts in temporary‐river ecology

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present three conceptual models that address spatial and temporal patterns in temporary-river biodiversity and biogeochemistry, and predict that aggregations of local communities in isolated water bodies of temporary rivers function as metacommunities.
Journal ArticleDOI

A landscape perspective of surface-subsurface hydrological exchanges in river corridors

TL;DR: In this article, the authors predict that a reach with many small bars should offer more hyporheic refugia for epigean fauna than a reach containing only a few large gravel bars because benthic organisms accumulate preferentially in sediments located at the upstream and downwelling edge of bars during floods.
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Trends of macroinvertebrate community structure in glacier‐fed rivers in relation to environmental conditions: a synthesis

TL;DR: In this article, a modified conceptual model based on Milner & Petts (1994) is presented which predicts the occurrence of macroinvertebrate families and subfamilies as determined by maximum water temperature (Tmax) and channel stability.
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The hyporheic zone as an invertebrate refuge: a review of variability in space, time, taxa and behaviour

TL;DR: The hyporheic zone is an important component in the suite of refuges that facilitate community resilience to disturbance events and should be safeguarded through sensitive management and effective rehabilitation schemes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The ecological significance of exchange processes between rivers and groundwater

TL;DR: The hyporheic corridor concept emphasizes connectivity and interactions between subterranean and surface flow on an ecosystem level for floodplain rivers as mentioned in this paper, which is a complementary concept to others which focus on surficial processes in the lateral and longitudinal dimensions.
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The functional significance of the hyporheic zone in streams and rivers

TL;DR: The hyporheic corridor concept describes gradients at the catchment scale, extending to alluvial aquifers kilometers from the main channel as discussed by the authors, which is an active ecotone between the surface stream and groundwater.
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An ecosystem perspective of alluvial rivers: connectivity and the hyporheic corridor

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that large-scale (km 3 ) hyporheic zones contain speciose food webs, including specialized insects with hypogean and epigean life history stages (amphibionts) and obligate groundwater species (stygobionts).
Journal ArticleDOI

Ecology of alpine streams

TL;DR: The view that effects of temperature on generation time and mutation rate determine the speed at which selection proceeds is consistent with altitudinal species richness patterns exhibited by zoobenthos along the alrirudinal gradient and may provide an evolutionary explanation for the low faunal diversity in alpine headwaters.
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