Vertical distribution patterns of zooplanktivorous fish in a shallow, eutrophic lake, mediated by water transparency

2004 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-69 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. J. Mous ◽  
W. L. T. van Densen ◽  
M. A. M. Machiels
Author(s):  
Leonor Botero

Thirty nine species of gorgonacean octocorals have been found so far in the area of SantaMarta and Parque NacionalTayrona. Themajority of zooxanthellate gorgonaceans are distributed betwenn 1 and 16-18 m of depth, since lack of hard, consolidated substrate inhibits their presence below these depths. The low water transparency is probably also influencing their maximun limit of vertical distribution, since on hard consolidated rock at 50 m of depth in one station, only azooxanthellate gorgonaceans grow. Type of substrate, amount of light and wave turbulence, are probably the main physical environmental factors that determine zonation and distribution patterns of gorgonaceans in the study area.


1979 ◽  
Vol 57 (9) ◽  
pp. 1719-1722 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert L. Baker

Keratella cochlearis and K. earlinae were found to coexist in a shallow eutrophic lake in western Canada. Differences between the two populations were found with respect to size, shape, seasonal abundance, birth rate, and vertical distribution. Results suggest that the two populations represent stable species and not ecophenotypes as suggested by recent literature.


1968 ◽  
Vol 46 (10) ◽  
pp. 1259-1271 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eugene G. Bozniak ◽  
Lorene L. Kennedy

An oligotrophic and a eutrophic lake in Alberta were comparatively investigated for 14 months to elucidate relationships between the physicochemical environment and the species composition, seasonal succession, vertical distribution, and seasonal cycles of their phytoplankton. One hundred and seven algal species were found in Muir Lake and 63 species in Hastings Lake. Increases in the numbers of Anabaena flos-aquae accompanied decreases in the numbers of several green algae, viz Pediastrum and Scenedesmus spp., suggesting antagonistic effects. Three groups of vertical distribution patterns of phytoplankton occurred in both lakes: buoyant and some motile forms accumulated at or near the surface, a second group was more or less uniformly dispersed throughout the water column, and a third group occurred only in bottom waters. Intermittent species were classed as either stenochronic or eurychronic, depending on the length of their pulses. In Muir Lake, Asterionella formosa was inversely correlated with silica concentrations. Dinobryon increases were associated with increases in phosphates and bicarbonates. Up to 5 times more orthophosphate occurred in the ice than in the water beneath. Ice may be of heretofore unrealized ecological significance as a phosphate reservoir for the spring aquatic community.


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