The most widespread pressure impacting river ecological status is the degradation of key hydromorphologic elements, such as sediment type and flow rate. However, almost nothing is known about the quantitative relationship between benthic invertebrate abundance and these elements. This synthesis compiles quantitative data on physical requirements and thresholds for invertebrates relative to two hydromorphologic factors: substrate size and hydraulic energy (measured as shear stress). Both factors are commonly a focus of river rehabilitation. However, we found only limited literature data that we could use to identify invertebrate preferences (189 taxa). Preferred substrate sizes of all stream epifauna we examined varied between 0.05 and 400 m...
Large river floodplains potentially include the full range of freshwater ecosystems from permanently...
Downstream variations of benthic macroinvertebrate communities on the River Rede below Catcleugh Res...
Streamflow variability is a major determinant of basin-scale distributions of benthic invertebrates....
Excessive inputs of fine‐grained sediment can damage aquatic ecosystems both by degrading habitat co...
Invertebrates are important sediment engineers, making up for their small body size with abundance a...
Excessive inputs of fine‐grained sediment can damage aquatic ecosystems both by degrading habitat co...
Invertebrates are important sediment engineers, making up for their small body size with abundance a...
Agricultural development has resulted in the degradation of freshwater ecosystems worldwide. Disenta...
This is the pre-peer reviewed version of the article, which has been published in final form at http...
International audience1. Principal threats to running waters are linked to human-made discharge modi...
Holistic environmental flows frameworks are built on our understanding of key flow-ecology relations...
1. Detrimental impacts of excessive fine-grained sediment inputs to streams and rivers are well esta...
Current knowledge regarding the flow preferences of benthic stream invertebrates is mostly based on ...
Instream hydraulics and riverbed substrate allow for the identification of mesohabitats, and contrib...
Stream risk assessment and restoration requires understanding of the controlling factors and the sca...
Large river floodplains potentially include the full range of freshwater ecosystems from permanently...
Downstream variations of benthic macroinvertebrate communities on the River Rede below Catcleugh Res...
Streamflow variability is a major determinant of basin-scale distributions of benthic invertebrates....
Excessive inputs of fine‐grained sediment can damage aquatic ecosystems both by degrading habitat co...
Invertebrates are important sediment engineers, making up for their small body size with abundance a...
Excessive inputs of fine‐grained sediment can damage aquatic ecosystems both by degrading habitat co...
Invertebrates are important sediment engineers, making up for their small body size with abundance a...
Agricultural development has resulted in the degradation of freshwater ecosystems worldwide. Disenta...
This is the pre-peer reviewed version of the article, which has been published in final form at http...
International audience1. Principal threats to running waters are linked to human-made discharge modi...
Holistic environmental flows frameworks are built on our understanding of key flow-ecology relations...
1. Detrimental impacts of excessive fine-grained sediment inputs to streams and rivers are well esta...
Current knowledge regarding the flow preferences of benthic stream invertebrates is mostly based on ...
Instream hydraulics and riverbed substrate allow for the identification of mesohabitats, and contrib...
Stream risk assessment and restoration requires understanding of the controlling factors and the sca...
Large river floodplains potentially include the full range of freshwater ecosystems from permanently...
Downstream variations of benthic macroinvertebrate communities on the River Rede below Catcleugh Res...
Streamflow variability is a major determinant of basin-scale distributions of benthic invertebrates....