Often simple metrics are used to summarise complex patterns in stream benthic ecology, thus it is important to understand how well these metrics can explain the finer-scale underlying environmental variation often hidden by coarser-scale influences. I sampled 47 relatively pristine streams in the central North Island of New Zealand in 2007 and (1) evaluated the local-scale drivers of macroinvertebrate community structure as well as both diversity and biomonitoring metrics in this unmodified landscape, and (2) assessed whether these drivers were similar for commonly used univariate metrics and multivariate structure. The drivers of community metrics and multivariate structure were largely similar, with % canopy cover and resource supply metr...
Contemporary patterns of land development mean that suitable reference sites for low-gradient stream...
Substrate stability is a key determinant of stream invertebrate community composition, but its measu...
Dendritic stream networks are inherently spatially and hierarchically structured, but the effects of...
1. Management of stream biodiversity is often tightly linked with the restoration and protection of ...
1. A spatially-extensive data set of stream macroinvertebrate communities from 49 northern New Zeala...
Responses of macroinvertebrate communities to human pressure are poorly known in large rivers compar...
1. Understanding spatial and environmental drivers of undisturbed stream assemblages is important fo...
The conversion of native forest to agricultural land has been an on-going issue threatening the heal...
Aquatic macroinvertebrates are critical to ecosystem functioning through their regulation of many es...
Our ability to predict community responses to environmental stress remains limited. To address this ...
Resolving land cover hierarchy relationships in urban settings is important for defining the scale a...
Although disturbance and productivity are clearly strong influences on lotic diversity, rarely have ...
According to metacommunity theories, the structure of natural communities is the result of both envi...
The distribution of aquatic communities is dependent on processes that act at multiplescales. This s...
Contemporary patterns of land development mean that suitable reference sites for low-gradient stream...
Substrate stability is a key determinant of stream invertebrate community composition, but its measu...
Dendritic stream networks are inherently spatially and hierarchically structured, but the effects of...
1. Management of stream biodiversity is often tightly linked with the restoration and protection of ...
1. A spatially-extensive data set of stream macroinvertebrate communities from 49 northern New Zeala...
Responses of macroinvertebrate communities to human pressure are poorly known in large rivers compar...
1. Understanding spatial and environmental drivers of undisturbed stream assemblages is important fo...
The conversion of native forest to agricultural land has been an on-going issue threatening the heal...
Aquatic macroinvertebrates are critical to ecosystem functioning through their regulation of many es...
Our ability to predict community responses to environmental stress remains limited. To address this ...
Resolving land cover hierarchy relationships in urban settings is important for defining the scale a...
Although disturbance and productivity are clearly strong influences on lotic diversity, rarely have ...
According to metacommunity theories, the structure of natural communities is the result of both envi...
The distribution of aquatic communities is dependent on processes that act at multiplescales. This s...
Contemporary patterns of land development mean that suitable reference sites for low-gradient stream...
Substrate stability is a key determinant of stream invertebrate community composition, but its measu...
Dendritic stream networks are inherently spatially and hierarchically structured, but the effects of...