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The definition of species richness used by species sensitivity distributions approximates observed effects of salinity on stream macroinvertebrates

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 08:50 authored by Benjamin Kefford, Richard Marchant, Ralf Schaefer, Leon Metzeling, Jason Dunlop, Satish Choy, Peter Goonan
The risk of chemicals for ecological communities is often forecast with species sensitivity distributions (SSDs) which are used to predict the concentration which will protect p% of species (PCp value). However, at the PCp value, species richness in nature would not necessary be p% less than at uncontaminated sites. The definition of species richness inherent to SSDs (contaminant category richness) contrasts with species richness typically measured in most field studies (point richness). We determine, for salinity in eastern Australia, whether these definitions of stream macroinvertebrate species richness are commensurable. There were strong relationships (r2 0.87) between mean point species, family and Ephemeroptera, Trichoptera and Plecoptera species richness and their respective contamination category richness. Despite differences in the definition of richness used by SSDs and field biomonitoring, their results in terms of relative species loss from salinity in south-east Australia are similar. We conclude that in our system both definitions are commensurable.

History

Journal

Environmental Pollution

Volume

159

Issue

1

Start page

302

End page

310

Total pages

9

Publisher

Pergamon

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

Crown Copyright © 2010 Published by Elsevier Ltd.

Former Identifier

2006026549

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2012-04-12

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