A comparison of bryophyte species diversity and niche structure of montane streams and stream banks

Abstract
Eleven alkaline western Canadian montane streams were sampled by transects to compare the bryophyte species cover, diversity, frequency, richness, niche width, and niche overlap in three vertical zones (relative to water level) with the same parameters in four acidic streams on Slide Mountain in the Adirondack Mountains of New York. Resources for niche width and overlap include vertical distance from water surface, aspect in stream, substrate size, and percent bare substrate. Species cover, richness, and diversity increase from the submerged zone 1 (< −5 cm) to the terrestrial zone 3 (10–30 cm). Brillouin species diversity increases from 1.98 to 3.03 (means per stream) along the same gradient. All species except one from zone 1 also occur in zone 3. The niche widths for aspect in stream, substrate size, and vertical distance from water surface are all negatively correlated with their chi-square values, indicating that the width values are most reliable for small widths and become increasingly less reliable for large niche widths. Niche overlap is high among most species for at least one resource parameter.

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