Food Web Models for Stream Ecosystems
- 1 May 2008
- proceedings article
- Published by American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE)
Abstract
Ecohydrological modeling of food webs can be a useful tool in stream/river health assessment, restoration, and management by providing insight into the long-term dynamics of biota. Conventional food web models are mostly limited to lake or marine ecosystems. In contrast to these models, stream ecosystem models need to capture the response associated with shorter residence times as well as the impacts of natural (hydrology, geomorphology, etc.) and anthropogenic (building dams and reservoirs, industrial pollution, etc.) drivers. Further, the benthic and non-benthic zones of streams/rivers have different physical, chemical and biological compositions. To investigate hydrologic drivers, along with other environmental and geomorphologic constraints, dimensional and non-dimensional food web models have been developed to evaluate ecosystem dynamics of the benthic and non-benthic zones of streams and rivers. Insights gained from these applications can be used to critique different food web modeling approaches and recommend an appropriate model for a given stream ecosystem.This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- When is stream invertebrate drift catastrophic? The role of hydraulics and sediment transport in initiating drift during flood eventsFreshwater Biology, 2007
- Model and laboratory study of dispersion in flows with submerged vegetationWater Resources Research, 2007
- Effects of turbulence on growth and metabolism of periphyton in a laboratory flumeWater Resources Research, 2002
- Effects of fish on plankton dynamics: a theoretical analysisCanadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 2000
- Physical and Biological Linkages within a Stream Geomorphic Hierarchy: A Modeling ApproachJournal of the North American Benthological Society, 1997
- Chaos in Ecology: Is Mother Nature a Strange Attractor?Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1993
- Estimating periphyton growth parameters using simple models1Limnology and Oceanography, 1987
- Spiral Chaos in a Predator-Prey ModelThe American Naturalist, 1979
- A Hierarchical Model of Lotic EcosystemsEcological Monographs, 1978
- Effect of a Current on Respiration and Mineral Uptake In Spirogyra and OedogoniumEcology, 1964