Factors Influencing the Distribution of Phytoplankton in 97 Headwater Lakes in Insular Newfoundland

1987 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 639-649 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. C. Earle ◽  
H. C. Duthie ◽  
David A. Scruton

Phytoplankton samples collected from 97 headwater lakes throughout insular Newfoundland were analyzed and used as a basis for a statistical evaluation of the environmental factors influencing species distributions. A selected subset of 77 taxa were clustered using a complete-linkage cluster analysis. The final 12 clusters represent the associations of species found occurring together in insular Newfoundland. Physical, chemical, and morphometric data collected with the phytoplankton served to characterize the environment. Factor analysis simplified the original variables, many of which were highly correlated and uninterpretable, into seven derived environmental factors: dystrophy, hardness, salinity, lake size, season, watershed influence, and orthophosphate enrichment. The resulting orthogonally rotated (VARIMAX) scores comprising these seven factors were correlated with species abundances. Spearman correlations showed several relationships between species distributions and the seven derived environmental factors. Although the analysis identified a subset of naturally acidic, dystrophic lakes, it failed to reveal any evidence of anthropogenic acidification in the lakes studied. For the most part, the members from each of the cluster groups demonstrated similar relationships with the derived environmental factors. The evidence suggests that the cluster groups may represent species associations; groups of species that co-occur because of their common requirements for specific environmental conditions. Phytoplankton autecological findings resulting from this study of insular Newfoundland lakes correspond well with conclusions derived independently from a comparable study of 95 headwater lakes in Labrador.




1990 ◽  
Vol 47 (5) ◽  
pp. 1047-1057 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernadette Pinel-Alloul ◽  
Ginette Méthot ◽  
Ghislain Verrault ◽  
Yvan Vigneault

Phytoplankton of 54 Québec lakes were studied to determine the effects of acidification, physico-chemistry, and lake morphometry on the community composition. The phytoplankton groups data matrix was submitted to a flexible linkage cluster analysis. The resulted six clusters of lakes are distributed along the northeast to southwest geographic axis and are related to an ascending density gradient in total phytoplankton, chlorophytes, cyanophytes, and microflagellates. Factor analysis produced five derived environmental factors (hardness-alkalinity, lake depth and transparency, dystrophy, lake size and salinity-sulphates loading), which explain 73% of the total variance of the abiotic data matrix. Alkalinity–acidity gradient is the most important factor related to phytoplankton groups and species distribution. Most of the cyanophytes taxa and some chlorophytes are positively related to the hardness-alkalinity and the sulphates loading factors. The abundances of pyrrophytes increases in alkaline lakes subjected to great sulphates loading. Lake morphometry and trophy also influence the phytoplankton distribution. Deep and clear lakes in eastern Quebec are dominated by chrysophycean species. Few species are related to the dystrophy factor. Phytoplankton distribution and relationships with environmental factors in Quebec lakes are compared with studies of the phytoplankton composition in Newfoundland and Labrador lakes.





2005 ◽  
Vol 56 (Supplement) ◽  
pp. 48
Author(s):  
N Nihei ◽  
T Tsuda ◽  
H Kurahashi ◽  
Y Higa ◽  
O Komagata ◽  
...  


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhammad Awais Ali Khan ◽  
Khalid Mahmood Ch. ◽  
Ijaz Ashraf ◽  
Muhammad Tahir Siddiqui ◽  
Jerry W. Knox




1985 ◽  
Vol 117 (7) ◽  
pp. 819-828 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ann E. Hajek ◽  
Donald L. Dahlsten

AbstractPopulations of Scolytus multistriatus (Marsham) from two areas of California were sampled in 1979 to investigate various factors influencing mortality. English-elm bolts (Ulmus procera Salisb.) ranging between 2.0 and 12.9 cm in diameter yielded mean mortalities from 49.1 to 86.0%. Mortality was highly correlated with egg density for branch samples from 7.0 to 12.9 cm in diameter. The minimum acceptable elm-branch diameter (2.8 cm) was attacked only during the first sampling period (mid-May to mid-June). Branch diameter, and therefore bark thickness, demonstrated a strong positive relationship with the density of S. multistriatus eggs, attacks, gallery lengths, and emerged adults. Gallery length density was positively correlated with attack density. At low attack densities in small-diameter branches, mean gallery lengths were shorter.



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