Developments in Stream Ecosystem Theory

Four significant areas of thought, (1) the holistic approach, (2) the linkage between streams and their terrestrial setting, (3) material cycling in open systems, and (4) biotic interactions and integration of community ecology principles, have provided a basis for the further development of stream ecosystem theory. The River Continuum Concept (RCC) represents a synthesis of these ideas. Suggestions are made for clarifying, expanding, and refining the RCC to encompass broader spatial and temporal scales. Factors important in this regard include climate and geology, tributaries, location-specific lithology and geomorphology, and long-term changes imposed by man. It appears that most riverine ecosystems can be accommodated within this expanded conceptual framework and that the RCC continues to represent a useful paradigm for understanding and comparing the ecology of streams and rivers.

[1]  F. B. Lotspeich,et al.  Watersheds as the Basic Ecosystem: this Conceptual Framework Provides a Basis for a Natural Classification System , 1980 .

[2]  Arthur V. Brown,et al.  Distribution of Insects within Riffles of Streams , 1984, Freshwater Invertebrate Biology.

[3]  D. Bruns,et al.  Macroscopic Models of Community Organization: Analyses of Diversity, Dominance, and Stability in Guilds of Predaceous Stream Insects , 1983 .

[4]  N. H. Anderson,et al.  Microdistribution and Density as Factors Affecting the Downstream Drift of Mayfiles , 1972 .

[5]  G. A. Bird,et al.  Coarse Particulate Organic Matter in Streams , 1981 .

[6]  G. Grossman,et al.  Stochasticity in Structural and Functional Characteristics of an Indiana Stream Fish Assemblage: A Test of Community Theory , 1982, The American Naturalist.

[7]  Joachim Illies,et al.  Versuch einer allgemeinen biozönotischen Gliederung der Fließgewässer , 1961 .

[8]  K. Cummins,et al.  An Introduction to the Aquatic Insects of North America , 1981 .

[9]  M. Rausher HOST PLANT SELECTION BY BATTUS PHILENOR BUTTERFLIES: THE ROLES OF PREDATION, NUTRITION, AND PLANT CHEMISTRY' , 1981 .

[10]  F. Hauer,et al.  Ecological Responses of Hydropsychid Caddisflies to Stream Regulation , 1982 .

[11]  K. Cummins,et al.  Trophic Relations of Aquatic Insects , 1973 .

[12]  J. Kalff,et al.  Seasonal Variation in Standing Crop and Species Diversity of Insect Communities in a small Quebec Stream , 1969 .

[13]  Louis C. Peltier,et al.  The Geographic Cycle in Periglacial Regions as it is Related to Climatic Geomorphology , 1950 .

[14]  B. C. Patten,et al.  Effects of Watershed Perturbation on Stream Potassium and Calcium Dynamics , 1979 .

[15]  C. Cushing,et al.  Organic Energy Budget of Rattlesnake Springs, Washington , 1982 .

[16]  G. Minshall,et al.  Tributaries as modifiers of the river continuum concept analysis by polar ordination and regression models , 1984 .

[17]  Charles A. S. Hall,et al.  Migration and Metabolism in a Temperate Stream Ecosystem , 1972 .

[18]  James R. Karr,et al.  Habitat Structure and Stream Fish Communities , 1978 .

[19]  Nancy B. Grimm,et al.  TEMPORAL SUCCESSION IN A DESERT STREAM ECOSYSTEM FOLLOWING FLASH FLOODING , 1982 .

[20]  W. K. Kellogg,et al.  Foraging and resource patchiness: field experiments with a grazing stream insect , 1981 .

[21]  M. Molles Trichopteran Communities of Streams Associated with Aspen and Conifer Forests: Long‐Term Structural Change , 1982 .

[22]  J. R. Jones A Further Ecological Study of the River Rheidol: The Food of the Common Insects of the Main-Stream , 1950 .

[23]  G. Minshall,et al.  INTERBIOME COMPARISON OF STREAM ECOSYSTEM DYNAMICS , 1983 .

[24]  J. Allan FEEDING HABITS AND PREY CONSUMPTION OF THREE SETIPALPIAN STONEFLIES (PLECOPTERA) IN A MOUNTAIN STREAM , 1982 .

[25]  S. G. Hildebrand The relation of drift to benthos density and food level in an artificial stream , 1974 .

[26]  Ronald B Gumtow An investigation of the periphyton in a riffle of the West Gallatin River, Montana , 1955 .

[27]  John M. Teal,et al.  Community Metabolism in a Temperate Cold Spring , 1957 .

[28]  B. W. Sweeney,et al.  Geographic Analysis of Thermal Equilibria: A Conceptual Model for Evaluating the Effect of Natural and Modified Thermal Regimes on Aquatic Insect Communities , 1980, The American Naturalist.

[29]  M. Klug,et al.  Feeding Ecology of Stream Invertebrates , 1979 .

[30]  Barbara Douglas THE ECOLOGY OF THE ATTACHED DIATOMS AND OTHER ALGAE IN A SMALL STONY STREAM , 1958 .

[31]  Luna Bergere Leopold,et al.  The concept of entropy in landscape evolution , 1962 .

[32]  T. Schoener The Controversy over Interspecific Competition , 1982 .

[33]  William P. Magdych Salinity Stresses Along a Complex River Continuum: Effects on Mayfly (Ephemeroptera) Distributions , 1984 .

[34]  R. L. Vannote A geometric model describing a quasi-equilibrium of energy flow in populations of stream insects. , 1978, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[35]  R. O'Neill,et al.  Measuring Nutrient Spiralling in Streams , 1981 .

[36]  R. Butcher Studies in the Ecology of Rivers. II. The Microflora of Rivers with Special Reference to the Algae on the River Bed , 1932 .

[37]  C. Townsend,et al.  The Distribution of Two Predators and their Prey in an Iron Rich Stream , 1976 .

[38]  C. Hawkins,et al.  Longitudinal and Seasonal Changes in Functional Organization of Macroinvertebrate Communities in Four Oregon Streams , 1981 .

[39]  D. Strayer The effects of surface geology and stream size on freshwater mussel (Bivalvia, Unionidae) distribution in southeastern Michigan, U.S.A. , 1983 .

[40]  T. D. Brock Relationship Between Standing Crop and Primary Productivity Along a Hot Spring Thermal Gradient , 1967 .

[41]  W. Hamner,et al.  Copepod swarms: Attributes and role in coral reef ecosystems , 1979 .

[42]  G. Minshall,et al.  Species Richness in Streams of Different Size from the Same Drainage Basin , 1985, The American Naturalist.

[43]  C. Townsend The ecology of streams and rivers , 1980 .

[44]  L. B. Leopold,et al.  River channel patterns: Braided, meandering, and straight , 1957 .

[45]  R. J. Mackay,et al.  Some Relationships between Systematics and Trophic Ecology in Nearctic Aquatic Insects, with Special Reference to Trichoptera , 1978 .

[46]  J. Richardson The Organismic Community: Resilience of an Embattled Ecological Concept , 1980 .

[47]  J. Webster,et al.  Periphyton Production in an Appalachian Mountain Trout Stream , 1981 .

[48]  G. Minshall,et al.  Fluvial processes and local lithology controlling abundance, structure, and composition of mussel beds. , 1982, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[49]  R. Margalef Ideas for a Synthetic Approach to the Ecology Of Running Waters , 1960 .

[50]  H. Wright,et al.  Forest Changes in Minnesota at the End of the Pleistocene , 1979 .

[51]  J. Sedell,et al.  Detritus Processing by Macroinvertebrates in Stream Ecosystems , 1979 .

[52]  W. Romme,et al.  FIRE AND LANDSCAPE DIVERSITY IN SUBALPINE FORESTS OF YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK , 1982 .

[53]  J. D. Newbold,et al.  Nutrient Spiralling in Streams: Implications for Nutrient Limitation and Invertebrate Activity , 1982, The American Naturalist.

[54]  Gene E. Likens,et al.  Energy Flow in Bear Brook, New Hampshire: An Integrative Approach to Stream Ecosystem Metabolism , 1973 .

[55]  G. Minshall,et al.  Relationships among chemical, physical, and biological indices along river continua based on multivariate analyses , 1983 .

[56]  Michael Turelli,et al.  Niche overlap and invasion of competitors in random environments I. Models without demographic stochasticity , 1981 .

[57]  R. Horwitz Temporal Variability Patterns and the Distributional Patterns of Stream Fishes , 1978 .

[58]  Richard Levins,et al.  Dialectics and reductionism in ecology , 1980 .

[59]  J. G. Needham,et al.  Life of Inland Waters , 1915 .

[60]  Howard T. Odum,et al.  Trophic Structure and Productivity of Silver Springs, Florida , 1957 .

[61]  A. Goudie The human impact: Man's role in environmental change , 1981 .

[62]  L. Barmuta,et al.  Letter to the editor: On the value of the river continuum concept , 1982 .

[63]  E. Percival,et al.  A Quantitative Study of the Fauna of Some Types of Stream-Bed , 1929 .

[64]  K. Cummins,et al.  Influences of Diet on the Life Histories of Aquatic Insects , 1979 .

[65]  R. Naiman The Annual Pattern and Spatial Distribution of Aquatic Oxygen Metabolism in Boreal Forest Watersheds , 1983 .