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Research article2014Peer reviewed

Insect emergence in relation to floods in wet meadows and swamps in the River Dalälven floodplain

Vinnersten, T. Z. Persson; Ostman, O.; Schafer, M. L.; Lundstrom, J. O.

Abstract

Annual variation in flood frequency and hydroperiod during the vegetation season has ecological impacts on the floodplain biota. Although many insect groups may have a lower emergence during a flood event, it is poorly known how annual emergence of insects in temporary wetlands is related to the variation in hydrology. Between May and September, we studied the weekly emergence of 18 insect taxa over six consecutive years, 2002-2007, in six temporary flooded wetlands (four wet meadows and two forest swamps) in the River Dalalven floodplains, Central Sweden. We used emergence traps to collect emerging insects from terrestrial and aquatic parts of wet meadows and swamp forests. In all wetlands, the insect fauna was numerically dominated by the orders Diptera, Hymenoptera, Coleoptera and Homoptera. On a weekly basis, 9 out of the 18 insect taxa had lower emergence in weeks with flood than in weeks with no flood, whereas no taxon had a higher emergence in weeks with flood. Over the seasons, we related insect emergence to seasonal flood frequency and length of hydroperiod. The emergence of most studied taxa decreased with increasing hydroperiod, which suggests that emergence after floods do not compensate for the reduced emergence during floods. Only Culicidae and the aquatic Chironomidae sub-families Tanypodinae and Chironominae showed an increase in emergence with increasing hydroperiod, whereas Staphylinidae peaked at intermediate hydroperiod. We conclude that a hydroperiod covering up to 40% of the vegetation season has a significant negative effect on the emergence of most taxa and that only a few taxa occurring in the temporary wetlands are actually favoured by a flood regime with recurrent and unpredictable floods.

Keywords

flood frequency; hydroperiod; insect emergence; temporary wetlands; wetland insects; wetland management; wet meadows

Published in

Bulletin of Entomological Research
2014, Volume: 104, number: 4, pages: 453-461
Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS

    UKÄ Subject classification

    Ecology

    Publication identifier

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007485314000078

    Permanent link to this page (URI)

    https://res.slu.se/id/publ/84051