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An overview of the assessment of aquatic ecosystem health
using benthic invertebrates
Trefor B. Reynoldson & Janice L. Metcalfe-Smith
Environment Canada, National Water Research Institute,
P.O. Box 5050, 867 Lakeshore Road, Burlington, Ontario L7R
4A6, Canada
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Abstract
Community structure or species composition of benthic
invertebrates has frequently been used in environmental monitoring
and assessment of aquatic systems. Three general approaches have
been taken: the 'saprobic' approach, which requires detailed knowledge
of taxonomy and is most effective in measuring impacts from sewage
effluents; diversity indices, which do not require detailed knowledge
of species requirements but ignore information provided by important
species and tend to lose information; and biotic indices, which
combine both approaches. In the past few years considerable advances
have been made by applying multivariate statistical techniques to
large data matrices and relating benthic community structure to
key environmental variables. Using these techniques it is possible
to establish reference communities for a set of environmental conditions,
to predict the benthic community that should occur at new sites
and thus measure deviation from an expected community type. This
suggests that environmental criteria and objectives can be established
based on biological variables as opposed to the more traditional
chemical approach.
Measurement of ecosystem health using functional attributes
of benthic invertebrates is generally in the development stage.
In the future, functional measures of ecosystem health, such as
chronic measures of toxicity or stress, should be incorporated into
any assessment process.
Keywords: benthos, biomonitoring, community structure, indices
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