Publication:
Effect of drift sampler exposure time and net mesh size on invertebrate drift density in the Njoro River, Kenya

No Thumbnail Available
Total Views 4
total views
Total Downloads 0
total downloads

Date

21/6/2018

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Funder

N/A

Publisher

Taylor & Francis group

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Cite this Item

Mureithi, P., Mbaka, J., M’Erimba, C., & Mathooko, J. (21 C.E.). Effect of drift sampler exposure time and net mesh size on invertebrate drift density in the Njoro River, Kenya. Taylor & Francis Group. https://repository.nrf.go.ke/handle/123456789/731

Abstract

Although invertebrate drift is an important ecological process in lotic ecosystems, very little is known about it in Kenyan rivers. The primary aim of this study was to investigate the effect of driftnet mesh size and exposure duration on drift density in 2017. Drift samples were dominated by Chironomidae, Baetidae, Simuliidae, Caenidae and Culicidae. The 100 µm mesh driftnet had the highest mean invertebrate density, followed by the 250 µm and 500 µm nets. Invertebrate drift densities decreased with increased exposure time. This study demonstrates that sampler mesh size and exposure time should be taken into account when characterising invertebrate drift in streams. Future studies should consider sampling different biotopes and during different seasons.

Description

Keywords

Collections

Usage Statistics