Archiv
für Hydrobiology 160 (1): 133-143 (May 2004)
A
simple technique using wooden stakes to estimate vertical patterns
of
interstitial oxygenation in the beds of rivers.
Marmonier, P., Delettre, Y., Lefebvre, S., Guyon, J. & Boulton, A.J.
Abstract:
Silt and fine sediments from anthropogenic activities frequently clog river
bed sediments, impairing vertical exchanges between stream and subsurface water.
River managers need a simple technique to detect the extent of
interstitial clogging and monitor the effectiveness of measures to reduce
siltation. We evaluated the use of
30-cm long pine-wood stakes, inserted for 3-6 weeks in the sediments of four
French rivers varying in interstitial clogging, to determine the association
between changes in the colour of the wood and the adjacent interstitial
conditions. There was a general
association between depth to interstitial hypoxia and location of the colour
change of the wooden stakes from brown to pale grey or black after 3-4 weeks.
This change in colour also broadly matched interstitial contents of fine
sediment, ammonium, and nitrate although the method could not reliably detect
microscale zones of anoxia or short-term changes in dissolved oxygen.
Thus, its effectiveness lies in its use as a cheap, simple, and
broad-scale indicator for collecting long-term integrated data of interstitial
oxygenation in stream sediments with minimal disruption of the gravel bed, and
appears an ideal tool for river managers and salmonid fish biologists.