Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of authors
- Preface
- I INTRODUCTION
- II FUNCTION OF GROUNDWATER / SURFACE WATER INTERFACES
- 2 Ecotonal animal assemblages; their interest for groundwater studies
- 3 Stochasticity in resource utilization by a larval chironomidae (diptera) community in the bed sediments of a gravel stream
- 4 Temporal and spatial dynamics of meiofaunal assemblages in the hyporheic interstitial of a gravel stream
- 5 Interstitial fauna along an epigean-hypogean gradient in a Rocky Mountain river
- 6 Filter effect of karstic spring ecotones on the population structure of the hypogean amphipod Niphargus virei
- 7 Community respiration in the hyporheic zone of a riffle-pool sequence
- 8 Diversity, connectivity and variability of littoral, surface water ecotones in three side arms of the Szigetköz region (Danube, Hungary)
- 9 Seasonal dynamics and storage of particulate organic matter within bed sediment of three streams with contrasted riparian vegetation and morphology
- 10 Bedsediments: Protein and POM content (RITRODAT-Lunz study area, Austria)
- 11 Dynamics and vertical distribution of particulate organic matter in river bed sediments (Morava River, Czech Republic)
- 12 Surface water/groundwater/forest alluvial ecosystems: functioning of interfaces. The case of the Rhine floodplain in Alsace (France)
- 13 Modelling of hydrological processes in a floodplain wetland
- 14 Contribution to the groundwater hydrology of the Amboseli ecosystem, Kenya
- 15 The role of hydrology in defining a groundwater ecosystem
- 16 Typology of water transport and chemical reactions in groundwater/lake ecotones
- 17 Development of a water transfer equation for a groundwater/surface water interface and use of it to forecast floods in the Yanghe Reservoir Basin
- 18 Uses and limitations of ground penetrating RADAR in two riparian systems
- III MALFUNCTION OF GROUNDWATER / SURFACE WATER INTERFACES: CAUSES AND METHODS OF EVALUATION
- IV MANAGEMENT AND RESTORATION OF GROUNDWATER / SURFACE WATER INTERFACES
- V CONCLUSION
- ANNEX
6 - Filter effect of karstic spring ecotones on the population structure of the hypogean amphipod Niphargus virei
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of authors
- Preface
- I INTRODUCTION
- II FUNCTION OF GROUNDWATER / SURFACE WATER INTERFACES
- 2 Ecotonal animal assemblages; their interest for groundwater studies
- 3 Stochasticity in resource utilization by a larval chironomidae (diptera) community in the bed sediments of a gravel stream
- 4 Temporal and spatial dynamics of meiofaunal assemblages in the hyporheic interstitial of a gravel stream
- 5 Interstitial fauna along an epigean-hypogean gradient in a Rocky Mountain river
- 6 Filter effect of karstic spring ecotones on the population structure of the hypogean amphipod Niphargus virei
- 7 Community respiration in the hyporheic zone of a riffle-pool sequence
- 8 Diversity, connectivity and variability of littoral, surface water ecotones in three side arms of the Szigetköz region (Danube, Hungary)
- 9 Seasonal dynamics and storage of particulate organic matter within bed sediment of three streams with contrasted riparian vegetation and morphology
- 10 Bedsediments: Protein and POM content (RITRODAT-Lunz study area, Austria)
- 11 Dynamics and vertical distribution of particulate organic matter in river bed sediments (Morava River, Czech Republic)
- 12 Surface water/groundwater/forest alluvial ecosystems: functioning of interfaces. The case of the Rhine floodplain in Alsace (France)
- 13 Modelling of hydrological processes in a floodplain wetland
- 14 Contribution to the groundwater hydrology of the Amboseli ecosystem, Kenya
- 15 The role of hydrology in defining a groundwater ecosystem
- 16 Typology of water transport and chemical reactions in groundwater/lake ecotones
- 17 Development of a water transfer equation for a groundwater/surface water interface and use of it to forecast floods in the Yanghe Reservoir Basin
- 18 Uses and limitations of ground penetrating RADAR in two riparian systems
- III MALFUNCTION OF GROUNDWATER / SURFACE WATER INTERFACES: CAUSES AND METHODS OF EVALUATION
- IV MANAGEMENT AND RESTORATION OF GROUNDWATER / SURFACE WATER INTERFACES
- V CONCLUSION
- ANNEX
Summary
ABSTRACT Faunal sampling was carried out in 1990–91 on three springs of a karstic system located at 15 km north-east of the city of Dijon (France) to investigate the filter effect of these outlets on the drifting population of the hypogean amphipod Niphargus virei. Results showed that, in places where limestones outcropped, the karstic spring ecotone did not modify the structure of the drifting population. In that case, faunal sampling of the springs during the floods was an effective method to study the dynamics of the population living in the aquifer. However, this method could not be applied in places where deep karstic ground-water circulated through water-saturated superficial deposits prior to emerge at the land surface. Indeed, in that case, the size frequency histograms of the drifting population of N. virei were characterised by abnormally low percentages of small size individuals and/or to a lesser extent by low percentages of large size individuals. These changes in the population structure were probably caused by two types of filters exerted by the karstic spring ecotone: 1) a mechanical filter which corresponded to the change of matrix between the deep karstified limestone aquifer and the shallow aquifer; 2) a biological filter probably due to the predation exerted by benthic invertebrates which have colonised the shallow aquifer.
INTRODUCTION
Surface water/groundwater ecotones (i.e. interaction zones occurring between surface water and groundwater systems) regulate the flow of matter, energy, information and organisms between two contrasted ecological systems (UNESCO, 1980; Pennak & Ward, 1986; Vanek, 1987; Ford & Naiman, 1989; Gibert, 1991a; Sharley, 1994).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Groundwater/Surface Water EcotonesBiological and Hydrological Interactions and Management Options, pp. 42 - 50Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997
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