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Development and evaluation of a Macroinvertebrate Biotic Integrity Index (MBII) for regionally assessing Mid-Atlantic Highlands Streams
Authors:Klemm Donald J  Blocksom Karen A  Fulk Florence A  Herlihy Alan T  Hughes Robert M  Kaufmann Philip R  Peck David V  Stoddard John L  Thoeny William T  Griffith Michael B  Davis Wayne S
Institution:(1) U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Exposure Research Laboratory, 26 W. Martin Luther King Drive, Cincinnati, Ohio 45268, USA, US;(2) Oregon State University, c/o U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 200 SW 35th St., Corvallis, Oregon 97333, USA, US;(3) Dynamac Corporation, 200 SW 35th St., Corvallis, Oregon 97333, USA, US;(4) U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory, 200 SW 35th St., Corvallis, Oregon 97333, USA, US;(5) SoBran, Inc., c/o U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Exposure Research Laboratory, 26 W. Martin Luther King Drive, Cincinnati, Ohio 45268, USA, US;(6) U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Center for Environmental Assessment, 26 W. Martin Luther King Drive, Cincinnati, Ohio 45268, USA, US;(7) U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Environmental Information, Environmental Analysis Division, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, DC 20460, USA, US
Abstract:The Macroinvertebrate Biotic Integrity Index (MBII) was developed from data collected at 574 wadeable stream reaches in the Mid-Atlantic Highlands region (MAHR) by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (USEPA) Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program (EMAP). Over 100 candidate metrics were evaluated for range, precision, responsiveness to various disturbances, relationship to catchment area, and redundancy. Seven metrics were selected, representing taxa richness (Ephemeroptera richness, Plecoptera richness, Trichoptera richness), assemblage composition (percent non-insect individuals, percent 5 dominant taxa), pollution tolerance Macroinvertebrate Tolerance Index (MTI)], and one functional feeding group (collector-filterer richness). We scored metrics and summed them, then ranked the resulting index through use of independently evaluated reference stream reaches. Although sites were classified into lowland and upland ecoregional groups, we did not need to develop separate scoring criteria for each ecoregional group. We were able to use the same metrics for pool and riffle composite samples, but we had to score them differently. Using the EMAP probability design, we inferred the results, with known confidence bounds, to the 167,797 kilometers of wadeable streams in the Mid-Atlantic Highlands. We classified 17% of the target stream length in the MAHR as good, 57% as fair, and 26% as poor. Pool-dominated reaches were relatively rare in the MAHR, and the usefulness of the MBII was more difficult to assess in these reaches. The process used for developing the MBII is widely applicable and resulted in an index effective in evaluating region-wide conditions and distinguishing good and impaired reaches among both upland and lowland streams dominated by riffle habitat.
Keywords:: Bioassessment  Biological monitoring  Benthic macroinvertebrates  Metrics  Multimetric  EMAP  IBI
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