Abstract
Aquatic insects are important elements in the ecological dynamics of lotic systems and their distribution in these environments can be driven by several environmental factors. Based in this assumption the aim of this study was to evaluate which environmental variables act as structural driver of the Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera and Trichoptera (EPT) community. We hypothesize that community structure will display strong temporal alterations due to characteristics in subtropical regions. We evaluated the effect of water temperature, conductivity, dissolved oxygen, depth, current velocity and rainfall on the distribution of EPT community. The insects were sampled using the litter bags incubation in a third-order subtropical stream located on Santa Catarina Island, Southern Brazil. The abundance of EPT was monitored for 24 months between January 2012 and December 2013. We identified 530 EPT specimens belonging to 11 families and 20 genera. The community showed a significant variation along the monitored time, mainly attributed to Trichoptera order. In addition to the results of this work the Ecnomidae family, Austrotinodes and Neotrichia genera represent new records for Santa Catarina State. Environmental variables varied significantly during the study time and depth and rainfall were the mainly environmental drivers acting under the community structure. We also observed a negatively correlation among rainfall and EPT community, especially to Trichoptera, which showed a strong temporal variation. In this study the EPT community displays a strong temporal variation along the monitored time, mainly attributed to rainfall events, characteristic of subtropical region. We also suggest that body adaptations also have an influence in the EPT community structure, once under flood event conditions these adaptations may offer advantage or disadvantage to invertebrate establishment, as pointed in the Trichoptera order.