“…Fish and aquatic macroinvertebrates are geomorphological agents that can modify the character and, therefore, stability of river bed sediments (Albertson & Allen, ; Rice et al, ; Statzner, ). Previous work has mostly used ex situ experimentation in flumes, mesocosms, and other artificial channels to demonstrate the ability of stream fauna to alter sediment transport by changing bed material grain‐size distributions, microtopography, and fabrics (Johnson et al, ; Pledger et al, ; Statzner, Peltret, et al, ; Stazner & Peltret, ) or by increasing sediment cohesion through the addition of biogenic materials, including trichopteran silk (Albertson et al, ; Cardinale et al, ; Johnson et al, ; Statzner et al, ). With the exception of investigations of salmonid redd building effects on gravel transport (Field‐Dodgson, ; Hassan et al, ; Kondolf et al, ; Montgomery et al, ) and crayfish effects on suspended sediment loads (Rice et al, , ), in situ experiments and field assessments of fluvial zoogeomorphic impacts are rare.…”