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Juliette Becquet



"Juliette Becquet (thèse CIFRE - INRAE et TEREO) remporte le concours de pitch du SHF !
Juliette Becquet, doctorante RiverLy équipe EcoFlowS, est la gagnante avec le pitch brillamment présenté de sa thèse"
https://riverly.inrae.fr/Actualites/2-doctorants-de-RiverLy-recompenses


 




THESIS

Impacts of hydrological alterations on macroinvertebrates in alpine streams.

Abstract

In recent decades, rapid hydrological changes have occurred in alpine catchments due to the combined effects of climate change and water abstraction, with major implications on aquatic biodiversity. While the diminution of seasonal snow cover reduces meltwater flow in spring, glacier shrinkage leads to a significant decrease in annual glacier runoff, especially in summer. The reduction of the meltwater contribution to streamflow at both the stream and the catchment scales also modifies stream environmental conditions (e.g. turbidity, temperature). Quantifying the relative effects of all environmental variables on aquatic communities is required to predict the ecosystem responses to hydrological alterations. To date, no study examined simultaneously the effects of physico-chemistry, hydraulics, and hydrology on the distribution of alpine communities, in particular macroinvertebrates. Impacts of flow alterations can be mitigated by implementing environmental flows, defined as the quantity, timing and quality of water flows required to sustain river ecosystems while satisfying societal needs. Among existing tools, hydraulic habitat models allow predicting changes in habitat suitability for aquatic species under different flow scenarios. They couple hydraulic models of stream reaches with hydraulic preference models relating the abundance of species to microhabitat hydraulics. Initially developed for fish, hydraulic preference models have never been adapted to alpine, often fishless, streams. It is urgent to develop new hydraulic preference models on alpine species to assess the impact of flow alterations on alpine stream ecosystems. This thesis aims to: (1) identify the main environmental drivers structuring alpine macroinvertebrate communities at the catchment scale, (2) develop hydraulic preference models on key macroinvertebrate species, (3) apply the new alpine hydraulic habitat models to a case study of a small hydropower plant in the Alps. In a first study based on 66 stream sites within three alpine catchments with different glacial influences, models performed on 23 taxa indicated that high turbidity had significant negative effect in 83% of models, and high flow velocity and summer flow had significant (mainly negative) effect in 43% of models. In a second study based on 30 microhabitats samples in five alpine streams, we developed hydraulic preference models for 41 taxa. Half of them had significant response to shear stress and flow velocity, with a good degree of transferability among all types of streams. At least 23% of the most abundant species were rheophilic in alpine streams, thereby threatened by flow reduction, including the glacial stream specialists which will be also affected by glacier retreat. In a third study based on 13 sampling dates (2018-2021) upstream and downstream the intake of a small hydropower plant located at 1,500 m a.s.l., we applied the new alpine hydraulic habitat models, and showed that changes in hydraulic habitats partly explained the lower macroinvertebrate abundances observed in the by-passed reach. Understanding the relationships between macroinvertebrate spatial distribution and environmental variables at both catchment and microhabitat scales helps to predict how communities will be affected by habitat alterations, and thus allow a better management of water resources in the mountains to mitigate the impacts on the alpine biodiversity.

Keywords


H2O'Lyon director of thesis

Nicolas Lamouroux, INRAE RiverLy

Thesis co-director

Sophie Cauvy-Fraunié, INRAE RiverLy

Doctoral school

ED 341 - E2M2

Laboratory

INRAE RiverLy

Defence date

5 octobre 2022

Defence language

French

Thesis jury members

  • Sylvain Dolédec, professor, University Lyon 1, president
  • Christine Weber, researcher, Eawag Swiss Federal Institut of Aquatic Science and Technology, rapporteur
  • Andréas Bruder, researcher, Applied sciences and arts University of Southern Switzerland, rapporteur
  • Evelyne Franquet, professor, Aix Marseille University, examiner
  • Michael Ovidio, lecturer, University of Liege, Belgium, examiner
  • Nicolas Lamouroux, director of research, INRAE Lyon, director of thesis
  • Sophie Cauvy-Fraunié, researcher, INRAE Lyon, thesis co-director, guest
  • Anne Dos Santos, managing partner, TEREO, thesis co-supervisor, guest