Good point but I would use an Ekman rather than a ponar unless you are working 
in sand and gravel. Ekman is smaller and easier to use, but does not capture 
all of the sediment. You would need a corer for that.

Ken

**************************

Dr. Kenneth M. Brown

Professor of Biological Sciences

Louisiana State University

Baton Rouge, Louisiana, 70803

225-578-1740

[email protected]

**************************

________________________________________
From: Ecological Society of America: grants, jobs, news 
[[email protected]] on behalf of Mike Schening [[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, July 18, 2013 8:55 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] ECOLOG-L Digest - 16 Jul 2013 to 17 Jul 2013 (#2013-195)

I think you'd want to use a portable dredge/grab sampler like a ponar followed 
by a rinsing and shorting of the sediments to separate the macros.  When I was 
with the USGS, we used a ponar to collect lake and river sediments (in the top 
~6") and we captured plenty of inverts.

Mike




  3. Suggestions for collecting benthic macroinvertebrates


Date:    Wed, 17 Jul 2013 07:32:47 -0700
From:    Kelly Stettner <[email protected]>
Subject: Suggestions for collecting benthic macroinvertebrates

I'm looking for best methods for collecting BURROWING macros from a river b=
ed. =A0I have a Hester-Dendy sampler, but my interest lies deeper, pun very=
much intended.=0A=0AIn exploring the pore water of the river (the zone whe=
re groundwater seeps up into the river's surface water) to get a sense of t=
he presence/absence/concentrations of certain pollutants, I am choosing to =
look at the macros instead of trying to sample the pore water itself. =A0Es=
sentially, as a volunteer grassroots organization with a null budget, I nee=
d to focus on those methods that will be cost-effective, engage the public,=
and produce meaningful results. =A0"Interviewing" the macro population in =
the target zone seems to hit all those requirements to an acceptable extent=
.=0A=0ATo wit, should I be digging with a shovel? =A0Seems very "gross" and=
crude in terms of damaging the organisms. =A0I have a couple of D-nets for=
kick samples, but would I be able to dig deep enough to collect a decent s=
ample of macros?=0A=0AOther suggestions that might require DIY hand-tools?=
=0A=0AMany thanks,=0AKelly Stettner, Director=0ABlack River Action Team=0AS=
pringfield VT

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