The plankton community of Lake Matano: factors regulating plankton composition and relative abundance in an ancient, tropical lake of Indonesia

被引:0
|
作者
Elisabeth Sabo
Denis Roy
Paul B. Hamilton
Peter E. Hehanussa
Roger McNeely
G. Douglas Haffner
机构
[1] University of Windsor,Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research
[2] Environment Canada,Research Division
[3] Canadian Museum of Nature,undefined
[4] APCE c/o Limnology-LIPI Jalan Prof. Dr. Dody Tisna Amidjaja,undefined
[5] Cibinong Science Centre,undefined
[6] LIPI,undefined
来源
Hydrobiologia | 2008年 / 615卷
关键词
Lake Matano; Phytoplankton; Zooplankton; Community structure; Tropical limnology;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Recent evidence reveals that food webs within the Malili Lakes, Sulawesi, Indonesia, support community assemblages that are made up primarily of endemic species. It has been suggested that many of the species radiations, as well as the paucity of cosmopolitan species in the lakes, are related to resource limitation. In order to substantiate the possibility that resource limitation is playing such an important role, a study of the phytoplankton and zooplankton communities of Lake Matano was implemented between 2000 and 2004. We determined species diversity, relative abundances, size ranges, and total biomass for the phytoplankton and zooplankton, including the distribution of ovigerous individuals throughout the epilimnion of Lake Matano in three field seasons. The phytoplankton community exhibited very low biomass (<15 μg l−1) and species richness was depressed. The zooplankton assemblage was also limited in biomass (2.5 mg l−1) and consisted only of three taxa including the endemic calanoid Eodiaptomus wolterecki var. matanensis, the endemic cyclopoid, Tropocyclops matanensis and the rotifer Horaella brehmi. Zooplankton were very small (<600 μm body length), and spatial habitat partitioning was observed, with Tropocylops being confined to below 80 m, while rotifer and calanoid species were consistently observed above 80 m. Less than 0.1% of the calanoid copepods in each year were egg-bearing, suggesting very low population turnover rates. It was concluded that chemical factors as opposed to physical or biological processes were regulating the observed very low standing crops of phytoplankton which in turn supports a very minimal zooplankton community restricted in both species composition and abundance. As chemical factors are a function of the catchment basin of Lake Matano, it is predicted that resource limitation has long played an important role in shaping the unique endemic assemblages currently observed in the food web of the lake.
引用
收藏
页码:225 / 235
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Effects of polyphenols on plankton assemblages and bacterial abundance representative of a pampean shallow lake: an experimental study
    Fernanda Alvarez, M.
    Benitez, Hernan H.
    Solari, Lia C.
    Villegas Cortes, J. Camilo
    Gabellone, Nestor A.
    Cristina Claps, M.
    AQUATIC MICROBIAL ECOLOGY, 2020, 85 : 85 - 100
  • [22] Plankton dynamics and photosynthesis responses in a eutrophic lake in Patagonia (Argentina): influence of grazer abundance and UVR
    Goncalves, Rodrigo J.
    Villafane, Virginia E.
    Medina, Cesar D.
    Barbieri, Elena S.
    Helbling, Walter E.
    LATIN AMERICAN JOURNAL OF AQUATIC RESEARCH, 2011, 39 (01): : 117 - 130
  • [23] Heterogeneity in physical, chemical and plankton-community structures in Lake Tanganyika
    Langenberg, V. T.
    Tumba, J. -M.
    Tshibangu, K.
    Lukwesa, C.
    Chitamwebwa, D.
    Bwebwa, D.
    Makasa, L.
    Roijackers, R.
    AQUATIC ECOSYSTEM HEALTH & MANAGEMENT, 2008, 11 (01) : 16 - 28
  • [24] Plankton community interactions in an Amazonian floodplain lake, from bacteria to zooplankton
    Feitosa, I. B.
    Huszar, V. L. M.
    Domingues, C. D.
    Appel, E.
    Paranhos, R.
    Almeida, R. M.
    Branco, C. W. C.
    Bastos, W. R.
    Sarmento, H.
    HYDROBIOLOGIA, 2019, 831 (01) : 55 - 70
  • [25] Plankton community structure during the vernal thermal front in southern Lake Ladoga, Russia
    Rahkola-Sorsa, M.
    Avinsky, V.
    Holopainen, A. -L.
    Ruuska, M.
    Karetnikov, S.
    INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF THEORETICAL AND APPLIED LIMNOLOGY, VOL 29, PT 3, PROCEEDINGS, 2006, 29 : 1143 - 1148
  • [26] Plankton Community Stability and Its Relationship with Phytoplankton Species Richness in Lake Nansihu, China
    Tian, Wang
    Zhang, Huayong
    Zhao, Lei
    Xu, Xiang
    Huang, Hai
    WATER, 2016, 8 (10)
  • [27] Seasonality in Environmental Conditions Drive Variation in Plankton Communities in a Shallow Tropical Lake
    Kondowe, Benjamin N.
    Masese, Frank O.
    Raburu, Phillip O.
    Singini, Wales
    Sitati, Augustine
    Walumona, Riziki Jacques
    FRONTIERS IN WATER, 2022, 4
  • [28] The hyperbenthic plankton community: composition, distribution, and abundance in a coral reef lagoon
    Carleton, J. H.
    Hamner, W. M.
    MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES, 2007, 336 : 77 - 88
  • [29] A long-term study on crustacean plankton of a shallow tropical lake: the role of invertebrate predation
    Arcifa, Marlene S.
    dos Santos Ferreira, Tania C.
    Fileto, Claudia
    Maioli Castilho-Noll, Maria S.
    Bunioto, Tais C.
    Minto, Walter J.
    JOURNAL OF LIMNOLOGY, 2015, 74 (03) : 606 - 617
  • [30] Plankton composition and water chemistry in the mixing zone of the Selenga River with Lake Baikal
    Sorokovikova, Larisa M.
    Popovskaya, Galina I.
    Belykh, Olga I.
    Tomberg, Irina V.
    Maksimenko, Svetlana Yu.
    Bashenkhaeva, Nadezhda V.
    Ivanov, Vyacheslav G.
    Zemskaya, Tamara I.
    HYDROBIOLOGIA, 2012, 695 (01) : 329 - 341