Dataset of a flow intermittency study: Benthic communities of 13 alpine intermittent rivers

Data Brief. 2024 Apr 20:54:110449. doi: 10.1016/j.dib.2024.110449. eCollection 2024 Jun.

Abstract

In the last few decades, perennial mountain streams are becoming increasingly intermittent, due to global climate change and anthropogenic pressures. This phenomenon leads to negative effects on benthic communities' biodiversity and river ecosystems functionality. However, the impact of flow intermittency in previously perennial Alpine streams is still poorly investigated. This dataset consists of all the data collected during a spring sampling campaign performed in April-May 2017 along 13 mountain streams located in the SW Italian Alps. These watercourses have been selected because it was possible to identify two different sampling sites: one perennial, where water has always been flowing throughout the years, and one intermittent, which showed flowing water during the sampling campaign but, in the last decade, has experienced summer dry phases. All the sites have been characterized defining the microhabitats in which samples were retrieved, and physico-chemical data were collected at each site. Biological sampling included benthic macroinvertebrates and diatoms. Therefore, the present dataset offers various biological, ecological and physico-chemical information regarding Alpine streams which have recently become intermittent. Potentially, it could be used for comparisons with different benthic communities present in mountain rivers worldwide which are facing drying events too. The broad range of information present in this dataset offers the possibility to examine only the perennial sites themselves, as an example of good river functionality due to continuous flowing water, or only the intermittent ones, to better understand the effects of drying events on these peculiar ecosystems.

Keywords: Diatoms; Freshwater; Italy; Macroinvertebrates; Riverbed drying; SW Alps.