Abstract
The distribution and abundance of benthic algae and macroinvertebrates were examined along a natural thermal gradient formed by hot springs in Little Geysers Creek, Sonoma Co., California, USA. Maximum water temperatures ranged from 52 °C at the uppermost station to 23 °C at a station 400 m downstream. Benthic chlorophyll a decreased exponentially from 2.5 g m−2 at 52 °C to less than 0.1 g m−2 at 23 °C, a pattern of decline also exhibited by algal phaeophytin. Blue-green algae dominated at higher temperatures but were replaced by filamentous green algae and diatoms at lower temperatures.
Macroinvertebrates were absent at temperatures ⩾45 °C; the highest density (> 150 000 m−2, mainly Chironomidae) occurred at 34 °C, whereas biomass was highest (4.6 g m−2, as dry weight) at 23 °C and species richness (15 species) was highest at 27 °C. The two predominant macroinvertebrate populations (the midge Tanytarsus sp. and the caddisfly Helicopsyche borealis) occurred at sites that were several degrees below their lethal thermal threshold, suggesting that a temperature ‘buffer’ is maintained.
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Lamberti, G.A., Resh, V.H. Distribution of benthic algae and macroinvertebrates along a thermal stream gradient. Hydrobiologia 128, 13–21 (1985). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00008935
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00008935