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Invasive crayfish as drivers of fine sediment dynamics in rivers: field and laboratory evidence

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Published

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Invasive crayfish as drivers of fine sediment dynamics in rivers: field and laboratory evidence. / Harvey, Gemma L; Henshaw, Alexander James; Moorhouse, Tom P et al.
In: Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, Vol. 39, No. 2, 02.2014, p. 259-271.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Harvey, GL, Henshaw, AJ, Moorhouse, TP, Clifford, NJ, Holah, H, Grey, J & Macdonald, DW 2014, 'Invasive crayfish as drivers of fine sediment dynamics in rivers: field and laboratory evidence', Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, vol. 39, no. 2, pp. 259-271. https://doi.org/10.1002/esp.3486

APA

Harvey, G. L., Henshaw, A. J., Moorhouse, T. P., Clifford, N. J., Holah, H., Grey, J., & Macdonald, D. W. (2014). Invasive crayfish as drivers of fine sediment dynamics in rivers: field and laboratory evidence. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, 39(2), 259-271. https://doi.org/10.1002/esp.3486

Vancouver

Harvey GL, Henshaw AJ, Moorhouse TP, Clifford NJ, Holah H, Grey J et al. Invasive crayfish as drivers of fine sediment dynamics in rivers: field and laboratory evidence. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms. 2014 Feb;39(2):259-271. Epub 2013 Oct 24. doi: 10.1002/esp.3486

Author

Harvey, Gemma L ; Henshaw, Alexander James ; Moorhouse, Tom P et al. / Invasive crayfish as drivers of fine sediment dynamics in rivers : field and laboratory evidence. In: Earth Surface Processes and Landforms. 2014 ; Vol. 39, No. 2. pp. 259-271.

Bibtex

@article{3f442a919ed046359f554dc3d893c5e9,
title = "Invasive crayfish as drivers of fine sediment dynamics in rivers: field and laboratory evidence",
abstract = "Despite increasing recognition of the potential of aquatic biota to act as {\textquoteleft}geomorphic agents{\textquoteright}, key knowledge gaps exist in relation to biotic drivers of fine sediment dynamics at microscales and particularly the role of invasive species. This study explores the impacts of invasive signal crayfish on suspended sediment dynamics at the patch scale through laboratory and field study. Three hypotheses are presented and tested: (1) that signal crayfish generate pulses of fine sediment mobilisation through burrowing and movement that are detectable in the flow field; (2) that such pulses may be more frequent during nocturnal periods when signal crayfish are known to be most active; and (3) that cumulatively the pulses would be sufficient to drive an overall increase in turbidity. Laboratory mesocosm experiments were used to explore crayfish impacts on suspended sediment concentrations for two treatments: clay banks and clay bed substrate. For the field study, high frequency near-bed and mid-flow turbidity time series from a lowland river with known high densities of signal crayfish were examined. Laboratory data demonstrate the direct influence of signal crayfish on mobilisation of pulses of fine sediment through burrowing into banks and fine bed material, with evidence of enhanced activity levels around the mid-point of the nocturnal period. Similar patterns of pulsed fine sediment mobilisation identified under field conditions follow a clear nocturnal trend and appear capable of driving an increase in ambient turbidity levels. The findings indicate that signal crayfish have the potential to influence suspended sediment yields, with implications for morphological change, physical habitat quality and the transfer of nutrients and contaminants. This is particularly important given the spread of signal crayfish across Europe and their presence in extremely high densities in many catchments. Further process-based studies are required to develop a full understanding of impacts across a range of river styles.",
keywords = "invasive species, Pacifastacus leniusculus, suspended sediment dynamics, turbidity, river management",
author = "Harvey, {Gemma L} and Henshaw, {Alexander James} and Moorhouse, {Tom P} and Clifford, {Nicholas J} and Helen Holah and Jonathan Grey and Macdonald, {David W.}",
year = "2014",
month = feb,
doi = "10.1002/esp.3486",
language = "English",
volume = "39",
pages = "259--271",
journal = "Earth Surface Processes and Landforms",
issn = "0197-9337",
publisher = "Wiley",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Invasive crayfish as drivers of fine sediment dynamics in rivers

T2 - field and laboratory evidence

AU - Harvey, Gemma L

AU - Henshaw, Alexander James

AU - Moorhouse, Tom P

AU - Clifford, Nicholas J

AU - Holah, Helen

AU - Grey, Jonathan

AU - Macdonald, David W.

PY - 2014/2

Y1 - 2014/2

N2 - Despite increasing recognition of the potential of aquatic biota to act as ‘geomorphic agents’, key knowledge gaps exist in relation to biotic drivers of fine sediment dynamics at microscales and particularly the role of invasive species. This study explores the impacts of invasive signal crayfish on suspended sediment dynamics at the patch scale through laboratory and field study. Three hypotheses are presented and tested: (1) that signal crayfish generate pulses of fine sediment mobilisation through burrowing and movement that are detectable in the flow field; (2) that such pulses may be more frequent during nocturnal periods when signal crayfish are known to be most active; and (3) that cumulatively the pulses would be sufficient to drive an overall increase in turbidity. Laboratory mesocosm experiments were used to explore crayfish impacts on suspended sediment concentrations for two treatments: clay banks and clay bed substrate. For the field study, high frequency near-bed and mid-flow turbidity time series from a lowland river with known high densities of signal crayfish were examined. Laboratory data demonstrate the direct influence of signal crayfish on mobilisation of pulses of fine sediment through burrowing into banks and fine bed material, with evidence of enhanced activity levels around the mid-point of the nocturnal period. Similar patterns of pulsed fine sediment mobilisation identified under field conditions follow a clear nocturnal trend and appear capable of driving an increase in ambient turbidity levels. The findings indicate that signal crayfish have the potential to influence suspended sediment yields, with implications for morphological change, physical habitat quality and the transfer of nutrients and contaminants. This is particularly important given the spread of signal crayfish across Europe and their presence in extremely high densities in many catchments. Further process-based studies are required to develop a full understanding of impacts across a range of river styles.

AB - Despite increasing recognition of the potential of aquatic biota to act as ‘geomorphic agents’, key knowledge gaps exist in relation to biotic drivers of fine sediment dynamics at microscales and particularly the role of invasive species. This study explores the impacts of invasive signal crayfish on suspended sediment dynamics at the patch scale through laboratory and field study. Three hypotheses are presented and tested: (1) that signal crayfish generate pulses of fine sediment mobilisation through burrowing and movement that are detectable in the flow field; (2) that such pulses may be more frequent during nocturnal periods when signal crayfish are known to be most active; and (3) that cumulatively the pulses would be sufficient to drive an overall increase in turbidity. Laboratory mesocosm experiments were used to explore crayfish impacts on suspended sediment concentrations for two treatments: clay banks and clay bed substrate. For the field study, high frequency near-bed and mid-flow turbidity time series from a lowland river with known high densities of signal crayfish were examined. Laboratory data demonstrate the direct influence of signal crayfish on mobilisation of pulses of fine sediment through burrowing into banks and fine bed material, with evidence of enhanced activity levels around the mid-point of the nocturnal period. Similar patterns of pulsed fine sediment mobilisation identified under field conditions follow a clear nocturnal trend and appear capable of driving an increase in ambient turbidity levels. The findings indicate that signal crayfish have the potential to influence suspended sediment yields, with implications for morphological change, physical habitat quality and the transfer of nutrients and contaminants. This is particularly important given the spread of signal crayfish across Europe and their presence in extremely high densities in many catchments. Further process-based studies are required to develop a full understanding of impacts across a range of river styles.

KW - invasive species

KW - Pacifastacus leniusculus

KW - suspended sediment dynamics

KW - turbidity

KW - river management

U2 - 10.1002/esp.3486

DO - 10.1002/esp.3486

M3 - Journal article

VL - 39

SP - 259

EP - 271

JO - Earth Surface Processes and Landforms

JF - Earth Surface Processes and Landforms

SN - 0197-9337

IS - 2

ER -