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ZO 403 Invertebrate Zoology lab Spring 2002 Stream Bio-Indicators Introduction Background on Rocky Branch For this lab we will identify invertebrates collected from two first-order streams. This is part of a continuing effort in support of an extensive ecosystem restoration effort for Rocky Branch by several groups associated with the University, led by Barbara Doll who spoke to us at our last meeting. Background: Rocky Branch is a first-order stream draining most of North Campus between Hillsborough Street and Western Boulevard. It arises at the extreme southwestern corner of the Meredith College campus and the I-440 Hillsborough Street intersection, and is tributary to Walnut Creek near where Fayetteville Street crosses I-40. Before it comes into campus it passes behind several businesses, and warehouses, and right through a lawn care company, apartments parking lot and several yards of older houses. It enters campus by passing under Gorman Street and immediately receives drainage from the N. C. State Physical Plant nursery/recycling center/waste transfer dock. Below the bridge to Motor Pool lot, Rocky Branch receives several culverts which drain Hillsborough Street, a C. P. & L. transformer pad and a commercial laundry. Then come culverts from N. C. State parking lots, the Food Service Center and, among many other University buildings, Schaub, Weaver, and Grinnells Halls, University Graphics, Central Stores, the Human Resources Building and the new Public Safety complex. At Dan Allen, culverts bring in drainage from all of Dan Allen and Hillsborough Street between Gregory Poole construction equipment and repair and Nelson Hall. After passing behind the gym and athletic fields, Rocky Branch passes under Pullen Road and though the city’s Pullen Park, Dix Hospital, and Boylan Heights. The catchment is relatively narrow, and the stream drains an unusually large area to be only first order because there are no obvious lateral tributaries. Lab Activity Assigned teams of students will identify and count all specimens collected from Mill Creek and Rocky Branch by taxonomic categories listed in the Stream Data Sheets that will be provided in lab. Results will be posted on the blackboard before the end of class. Each student must compose a report based on this information and turn it in on April 12. Report Use the simplified bioindicator index (Resh's Family-Based Index) to calculate indices of water quality for each collection. Discuss your own observations about the differences in conditions in the two streams. Choose one of the types of animals that was present in Mill Creek and look up its diet, habitat requirements, and environmental tolerances. This animal should not be one of those in your Voucher Collection, but it may be one for which you write a notebook record. Based at least partly on what you find out about that animal, discuss the factors that probably enhanced the biodiversity of macroinvertebrates in Mill Creek. 1 ZO 403 Invertebrate Zoology lab Very little historical research has been done on Rocky Branch, but much can be extrapolated from the history of a typical forest stream in our eastern Piedmont and the known effects of settlement, agriculture, and urbanization. Rocky Branch must once have been a picturesque woodland stream, cascading over bedrock outcrops between low banks. The landscape must have been forested with oaks and hickories and shaded overhead by dogwoods, elms, sycamores, and tulip poplars. Gravely riffles and sandy pools would create an abundance of refuges and habitats. Old beaver dams, small seepage springs and intermittent tributaries would have formed low, mucky marshes along the banks. It must have overflowed every winter into pools which supported a variety of amphibians, fairy shrimp, crayfish, isopods, amphipods, diving beetles, and fingernail clams. Raccoons, otters, wild turkeys, black bears, foxes, and deer would have visited frequently. Many species of salamanders, turtles, snakes, crayfish, darters and minnows would breed in the main channel, floodplain pools, and beaver ponds. The gravelly riffles must have harbored a diverse mix of stoneflies, caddisflies, mayflies, dragonflies, beetle larvae, and hellgrammites. When the land was cleared for agriculture in the early 1800’s, both soil erosion and peak runoff increased greatly. The stream's rocky riffles were smothered with mud and sand. Devegetated banks caved in, adding more sediment to the channel. Alluvial fans of gravel and silt spread over the floodplain above obstructions. Wastes from animals and outhouses and excess fertilizer began to pollute the stream with nutrients, stimulating Spring 2002 algal and bacterial growth and reducing oxygen levels in the sediments. As the city of Raleigh grew out past campus, increasing areas of streets and roofs drained rapidly down into the stream channel in every storm. The rushing waters began to scour the channel, both downward and outward, removing increasingly valuable land surfaces from the campus. From the 1950’s and continuing through the present, more and more parking lots, apartments, buildings, and roads were added to the catchment, mainly by the University. The banks of Rocky Branch were channelized and hardened with gravel, concrete block walls and asphalt rubble to stop the loss of land from athletic fields and parking lots. Former floodplains were buried under landfill. A section of about 100 m was enclosed in a culvert behind Carmichael Gym. Waste asphalt and concrete were dumped down the ravine sides. Later, granite riprap and culverts were added to reduce caving of the banks. These changes greatly increased the proportion of impervious surface in the catchment, causing even higher flows during rainstorms, and much lower flows in between rains. The combination of high storm flows and bank stabilization caused the channel to erode downward to bedrock and leave a deep ravine below Dan Allen Drive. Most recently (about 1993), Gorman Drive was widened and built up to a high causeway, confining the stream into a long, narrow culvert. Rocky Branch has been treated like a drainage ditch by the University and upstream urban and suburban areas for decades. The headwaters are not on campus, and include a long reach of rail2 ZO 403 Invertebrate Zoology lab Spring 2002 road, the Hillsborough-Beltline intersection, two lawn care companies, and a suburban area where residents sometimes discard trash into the stream. Eroded silt and clay, toxic chemicals and garbage washed from construction sites, waste handling facilities, street surfaces and building drains, and even direct sewage discharges continue to contaminate the water. odonates in 1991, but neither was found there in 1996. The only organisms classes have found regularly in segments of Rocky Branch on the N. C. State campus are midgefly and cranefly larvae, water striders, crayfish, and aquatic earthworms, and at one site, salamanders. That relatively rich site was totally restructured by the recent channel restoration project. Previous Surveys All animals collected in Rocky Branch since that 1978 visit are relatively insensitive to poor water quality and habitat disturbance. In one or two studies, small populations of green sunfish, hydropsychid caddisfly and calopterygid damselfly larvae were found, but there was no trend for improvement until about 1998. Part of the reason for this low diversity was a scarcity of important natural habitats such as clean gravel and leafpacks. Frequent scouring by high flows had flushed out what little organic detritus might have fallen into the stream. In 1978, the newly formed Biological Monitoring Group of the N. C. Division of Environmental Management sampled Rocky Branch in a preliminary comparison of urban and rural streams. The results were shocking - they found nothing but midgefly larvae and aquatic earthworms. This was the lowest biodiversity and poorest bioindication of water quality of any stream they sampled. N. C. State student organizations and aquatic ecology classes have been surveying Rocky Branch for about 12 years. A survey involves sampling with kickscreens and dipnets to retrieve as many different kinds of larger invertebrates as possible. The numbers and identity of the animals we catch enable a comparison with general biomonitoring assessment standards and through an increasing span of years, to determine whether conditions for the biological communities of Rocky Branch are declining, improving or remaining the same. You are now part of that ongoing effort. 'Restoration Efforts In the early 1990's, students began an effort to restore and protect the water quality and habitats of Rocky Branch. The early efforts of the old Student Environmental Action Coalition around 1989 have been continued by the current Lorax club. We have benefited over that entire period from the leadership of Ms. Barbara Doll of the U. N. C. Sea Grant Program. Ms. Doll has won a grant to finance the current restoration program. Previous, smaller projects had already resulted in stream bank plantings, channel deflector posts, and increased protection of the stream from on-campus wastes and runoff. Most of those early efforts were replaced by the current project. Not surprisingly, their surveys have revealed very low numbers and diversity compared to less disturbed streams. At a site above Gorman Street where Rocky Branch flows under a street near the railroad track, we collected amphipod crustaceans (probably Crangonyx) and 3 ZO 403 Invertebrate Zoology lab Those early efforts paid off when we began to see limpets, mud snails, and two kinds of mayfly larvae. In February 1997, Ms. Doll, a student, myself, and a Physical Plant employee transported several tubs of leaf detritus, mud, twigs and gravel from a similar-sized stream in a wooded part of Centennial Campus and put it in the stream near the Motor Pool lot. Two months later, several species of aquatic “true bugs,” beetles and dragonflies were collected, and the number of baetid mayflies seemed higher in the segment below the “seeding.” Although most of those organisms were found again in 1998 and 1999, there have been no improvements in the area downstream of Dan Allen Drive at all, and no further additions of species to the reach above Dan Allen. Some of the animals found in 1999 have not been collected since then. In recent years student stream watchers have observed discoloration, foam and crayfish kills in Rocky Branch several times. Appendix: How to Sample Streams for Bio-Indicators To compare selected stream segments, sample with dipnets, kickscreens, pans, forceps and pipettes to get as many different kinds of animals as possible. Watch out for broken glass and rusty metal as you sample and pick the material! Because of the possibility of bacterial contamination, wash your hands thoroughly before consuming any food or drink after collecting in streams. Remember that materials collected with kickscreens and dipnets are best examined in white pans in good light. It is much harder to see the animals in the nets and, if you spend most of your time searching in a net, you are liable to con- Spring 2002 clude that there are none present when in fact there are quite a few. Each pan should be searched for at least 3 minutes, and 6 or 7 is better. Many animals do not move immediately after a sample is placed in a pan, but become active enough to recognize and pick only after a few minutes. This will require patience, because only a few kinds of animals move in the first minute or two. Do not kill crayfish, fish, or salamanders. Their populations are less able to intensive collection and they can often be identified with experience better as live specimens in the field than as preserved specimens in the lab. Whenever possible, release them alive. Crayfish cannot be identified as immature specimens, and the easiest adults to identify are the actively breeding males. We only need to collect and preserve a few actively breeding males to document a crayfish fauna. Representative specimens of the medium and small invertebrates will be preserved for identification and evaluation in a later lab meeting. Continue picking and transferring the animals into labeled alcohol jars until you see no new kinds of animals. Midgefly larvae and aquatic oligochaetes are quite small and amazingly diverse in streams. Pick large numbers of them, even though they may not appear to be different kinds, because even sub-family level differences are hard to recognize without a dissecting microscope. After the class has put 5 or 6 of each of the other, recognizably different, types of animal into the jars at any one site, additional specimens should be returned alive to the stream. Another useful collecting approach is to grab a thicker leafpack and peel away the leaves one at a time to find animals. 4 ZO 403 Invertebrate Zoology lab Spring 2002 The older, more decayed leafpacks will produce more animals than freshly formed ones. Also, larger rocks and woody debris, or even bottles and cans, can be examined directly. Look with special care for brownish or grayish, small, inactive animals such as snails, water pennies, and limpets, and minute but active midgefly larvae and aquatic earthworms. Be sure that data on temperature, oxygen, turbidity, pH and water flow are taken before the class leaves the sampling area. All samples and data must be returned to the classroom, and there thoroughly and accurately labeled with date, stream and location, well preserved with alcohol, and left in the care of Ms. Austin. 5