Aquatic insect fauna Biodiversity Community composition Southeast Asia Tropical stream
Issue Date:
2008
Publisher:
Limnology
Citation:
Volume: 9, Issue: 3, Page : 219-229
Abstract:
Aquatic insect communities were investigated from the Muonghoa Stream in the Sapa Highland
(highest peak 3,143 m), a subtropical mountain stream in northern Vietnam. Field investigations for
quantitative (Surber net 50 cm ?? 50 cm, mesh size 0.2 mm, riffle and pool/run) and qualitative (hand net,
mesh size 1 mm) sampling were conducted at nine sites along the watercourse between 27 November and 2
December 2005. As a result, a total of 216 species (the majority of them undescribed) belonging to 139
genera, 61 families, and nine orders were recognized: 53 Ephemeroptera species (24.5%), nine Odonata
species (4.2%), 15 Plecoptera species (6.9%), seven Hemiptera species (3.2%), 35 Coleoptera species
(16.2%), one Megaloptera species (0.5%), 29 Diptera species (13.4%), 66 Trichoptera species (30.6%), and
one Lepidoptera species (0.5%). Trichoptera, Ephemeroptera, and Coleoptera represented the major aquatic
insect groups with regard to taxonomic and individual richness, whereas Hemiptera and Odonata were
relatively less diverse and abundant than in studies of other tropical Southeast Asian streams. The
dominance, richness, and diversity indices (H?) fell within the following ranges [mean ? standard deviation
(SD)]: 0.18-0.76 (0.42 ? 0.19), 4.13-9.19 (7.06 ? 1.45), and 1.61-3.22 (2.67 ? 0.55), respectively. Riffle
habitats generally yielded numbers of aquatic insect species and individuals approximately twice that
sampled in pool/run habitats. Shredders were relatively larger in proportion within the headwater reach,
whereas scrapers and collector-gatherers were more abundant in the middle and lower stream reaches. This
functional feeding group composition is characteristic of temperate streams in East Asia. The results of
detrended correspondence analysis and Bray - Curtis cluster analysis indicated that aquatic insect
compositions at the sampling sites were very reflective of the reach characteristics, which evidence gradual
changes with altitude and stream order along the stream watercourse. This is the first comprehensive
investigation of aquatic insects in highland Southeast Asian regions. ?? The Japanese Society of Limnology
2008.