72,118 research outputs found

    Gravel pits support waterbird diversity in an urban landscape

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    We assessed the benefit of 11 gravel pits for the settlement of waterbird communities in an urbanized area lacking natural wetlands. Gravel pits captured 57% of the regional species pool of aquatic birds. We identified 39 species, among which five were regionally rare. We used the Self Organizing Map algorithm to calculate the probabilities of presence of species, and to bring out habitat conditions that predict assemblage patterns. The age of the pits did not correlate with assemblage composition and species richness. There was a positive influence of macrophyte cover on waterbird species richness. Larger pits did not support more species, but species richness increased with connectivity. As alternative wetland habitats, gravel pits are attractive to waterbirds, when they act as stepping stones that ensure connectivity between larger natural and/or artificial wetlands separated in space

    Aspects of the washout of salmonid eggs. 5. Attempts to assess the importance of washout as a cause of mortailty

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    The paper reviews the methodology of attempts to assess the importance of washout as a cause of loss of salmonid eggs and alevins. The results of this study are presented of various small-scale field trials using buried artificial salmonid eggs and tethered table tennis balls. The results suggested that, even when few eggs were actually lost by washout, some downstream movement of the upper layers of gravel and of artificial eggs might have taken place

    Experiments using an artificial stream to investigate the seasonal growth of chalk-stream algae

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    Research into the production ecology of chalk streams using a large artificial recirculating stream is described. Physical chemical processes including calcium and inorganic phosphate levels, and exchange of gaseous carbon dioxide in both a simple closed system and a circulating system with gravel substrate have been monitored in both light and dark conditions. Further experiments were concerned with the seasonal changes in algal growth over the gravel substrate with constant water velocities and replenishment. The algal population, composed mainly of the diatoms Achnanthes minutissima, Meridion circulare, Nitzschia fonticola and Synedra ulna reached a peak in mid May and declined rapidly during June. Concentrations of phosphate phosphorus fell as the diatoms grew but was not thought to limit growth. Silicate concentrations followed the diatom cycle closely but never fell below 0.8 mg/l Si. It is possible that one of the nutrients may have been limiting the rate of growth due to steep diffusion gradients through the algal mat. In the last summer and autumn a hard calcareous crust composed of the green alga Gongrosira incrustans and the blue green alga Homeothrix varians , developed. The channel stream is compared with the natural conditions found in chalk streams

    Integrated fisheries, RHS and ecological data model for the River Lee

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    MEASUREMENT OF DENITRIFICATION ACTIVITY OF THE BOTTOM SEDIMENT AT NOGAWA RIVER (Natural purification of an urban river ecosystem)

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    Nitrogen removal by denitrification in sediment and artificial substrate was measured at Nogawa River by continuous method, based on acetylene inhibition technique, during one year from December 1987 to November 1988. The quality of artificial substrate is an important factor for denitrification rate in a river bed sample. The denitrification rate per unit area in the river bed composed of concrete (13.8gN m⁻² year⁻¹) was higher than that in the gravel and sand (7.4gN m⁻² year⁻¹ ) river bed. The proportion of denitrificated nitrogen to the input nitrogen in the river was calculated. The average value for the concrete river bed was 0.3%, and 7.4% in the river bed of gravel and sand. From these results, if all area of Nogawa River was changed to a concrete bed, the proportion of denitrificatied nitrogen to input nitrogen is estimeted to be 1.7%, and about 3.1% in the case of a gravel and sand. Denitrification activity in the river bed of a small urban river was found to be dependent on the type of river bed.Article信州大学理学部付属諏訪臨湖実験所報告 7: 47-53(1991)departmental bulletin pape

    Artificial recharge – measurement of soil infiltration in Rožnov pod Radhoštěm

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    The purpose of this study is to evaluate the potential for infiltration in a study area – Rožnov pod Radhoštěm, the Czech Republic. The results are important for the future design of an artificial recharge structure as a method to store water underground in times of water surplus. A total of six measurements of infiltration were made using a double ring infiltrometer on selected prospective sites for the future application of artificial recharge. The results of infiltration tests were analysed based on the Philip`s model. The steady soil infiltration rates ranged from 28 cm∙h-1 to 70.38 cm∙h-1and the cumulative soil infiltration ranged from 58 cm to 68 cm

    Effects of flow regime on the young stages of salmonid fishes. Summary and conclusions based on results for 1981-1985

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    The main British salmonid species spawn in clean gravel in streams and rivers, many of them in the upland areas of Britain. The earliest stages of the life cycle (eggs and alevins) spend some months within the gravel of the river bed. During this period their survival rate can be strongly influenced by flow regime and by related phenomena such as movement of coarse river bed material, changes in water level and the deposition of silt. In recent years human influence upon the flow regimes of upland water courses and upon the sediment inputs to them has increased. In order to conserve and, if possible, enhance the populations of salmonid fishes a deeper understanding of the interrelationships between survival of young salmonids and flow-related phenomena is needed. The acquisition of appropriate information is the main aim of the present project, which included: Studies on silt movement and the infilling of gravel voids by fine sediments, together with initial studies on the relationship between intragravel oxygen supply rate and the survival of intragravel stages of salmonids; studies in the general field of egg washout. The latter investigated the physical background to gravel bed disruption, the examination of the physical characteristics of sites chosen for redds, dimensions of redds and burial depth of eggs relative to the size of the fish constructing the redd and a series of smaller studies on other aspects of egg washout

    Effects of flow regime on the young stages of Salmonid fishes. Conclusions based on results for 1977-1981

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    Rivers in Teesdale and its fish population have been monitored for several years. This report briefly describes the life cycle of British salmonid fishes and indicates the main ways in which this life cycle is influenced by discharge and related effects. Some highlights of the research results for 1977 - 1981 are briefly stated and proposals for future research are listed. Some practical implications of the results are discussed. (PDF contains 34 pages
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