Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1931
Title: Elevation and land use as drivers of macroinvertebrate functional composition in Afromontane headwater streams
Authors: Yegon, M.
Masese, F.
Sitati, A.
Graf, W.
Keywords: Macroinvertebrate
Land use drivers
Afrotropical
Functional feeding groups
Issue Date: 2021
Publisher: CSIRO PUBLISHING
Citation: Mourine J. Yegon , Frank O. Masese , Augustine Sitati and Wolfram Graf, Elevation and land use as drivers of macroinvertebrate functional composition in Afromontane headwater streams. Marine and Freshwater Research 72(10), pp. 1517-1532, September 2021
Series/Report no.: Marine and Freshwater Research;72(10), pp. 1517-1532
Abstract: Macroinvertebrates play a unique role in aquatic ecosystems by acting as processors of nutrients and organic energy from allochthonous and autochthonous sources. Within East Africa, and especially Kenya, anthropogenic influences on streams and rivers as a result of deforestation and the expansion of agricultural lands are pervasive. This study investigated land use v. altitudinal shifts in the functional composition of macroinvertebrates within the Mount Elgon catchment in western Kenya.Atotal of 20 sampling sites in 12 streams, 10 sites each within forested and agricultural areas, located in 3 elevation categories were sampled for physicochemical water parameters and macroinvertebrates. Significant (P , 0.05) spatial variation was observed in total suspended solids, coarse particulate organic matter, temperature and electrical conductivity between forested and agricultural sites. Shredder biomass and abundance was higher in forested streams at higher elevations. There was a significant increase in the abundance (of shredders, predators, collector filterers and gatherers), taxon richness (of shredders, predators and scrapers) and biomass (of shredders, collector filterers and gatherers) of functional feeding groups with increasing elevation. Data of near-natural sites are urgently needed to disentangle altitude and land use influences on the diversity and composition of aquatic communities in high-elevation streams in the tropics.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1931
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