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Journal ArticleDOI

Factors facilitating the coexistence of hydropsychid caddis larvae (trichoptera) in the same river system

Alan G. Hildrew, +1 more
- 01 Jun 1979 - 
- Vol. 48, Iss: 2, pp 557
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TLDR
It is suggested that net-spinning sites are in short supply and that differences in their use are necessary for stable coexistence, and both sequential distribution patterns and ecological distinctions between species in the same river section could effectively partition the supply of net- Spinning sites or food between the species.
Abstract
SUMMARY (1) Six species of Hydropsychidae were found to coexist in the River Usk and its tributaries (South Wales). There is a marked downstream sequence of species. Some of them have disjunct distributions, others have zones of overlap. On the basis of extensive temperature records from three river systems it appears that this succession is related to sequential differences in temperature. Experimental observations on respiration rates of three species suggest that they are adapted to their own characteristic temperature regimes. (2) Hydropsyche pellucidula and Hydropsyche siltalai coexist in most of the main river. They exhibit differences in their water velocity preferences, life cycles, microhabitat preferences and diet. Hydropsyche siltalai and Hydropsyche instabilis coexist in some sites. No ecological differences between them were revealed. (3) Both sequential distribution patterns and ecological distinctions between species in the same river section could effectively partition the supply of net-spinning sites or food between the species. It is suggested that net-spinning sites are in short supply and that differences in their use are necessary for stable coexistence.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Hydraulic Stream Ecology: Observed Patterns and Potential Applications

TL;DR: Hydraulic stream ecology provides methods to scale flow in lotic research, which will lead to an increase in replicability and predictability in studies of running water ecosystems.
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Climate change effects on upland stream macroinvertebrates over a 25‐year period

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used data spanning 25 years (1981-2005) from temperate headwaters at Llyn Brianne (UK) to test three hypotheses: (1) stream macroinvertebrates vary with winter climate; (2) ecological effects attributable to directional climate change and the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) are distinguishable and (3) climatic effects on macroinverstebrates depend on whether streams are impacted by acidification.
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What determines a species’ geographical range? Thermal biology and latitudinal range size relationships in European diving beetles (Coleoptera: Dytiscidae)

TL;DR: This study is the first to provide empirical support for a relationship between thermal physiology and range size variation in widespread and restricted species, conducted using the same experimental design, within a phylogenetically and ecologically controlled framework.
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The influence of seasonal and taxonomic factors on the ordination and classification of running‐water sites in Great Britain and on the prediction of their macro‐invertebrate communities

TL;DR: The environmental variables most useful in distinguishing between rivers were substratum characteristics, alkalinity and total oxidized nitrogen, and the values of the Czekanowski Index of Similarity between the observed and predicted fauna of test sites were close to realistic maximum values.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Resource Partitioning in Ecological Communities

TL;DR: To conclude with a list of questions appropriate for studies of resource partitioning, questions this article has related to the theory in a preliminary way.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Paradox of the Plankton

TL;DR: The problem that is presented by the phytoplankton is essentially how it is possible for a number of species to coexist in a relatively isotropic or unstructured environment all competing for the same sorts of materials.
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Niche Overlap as a Function of Environmental Variability

TL;DR: There is an effective limit to niche overlap in the real world, and this limit is insensitive to the degree of environmental fluctuation, unless it be very severe.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Drift of Stream Insects

TL;DR: The drift of stream insects and other invertebrates refers to their down­ stream transport in stream currents, and it has interested many ecologists that the drift usually occurs in some type of diel periodicity.