Thirteen mountain lakes, originally fishless, at 1325 and 2150 m a.s.l., with the maximum depths ranging from two to 15 m, and areas of 0.3 to 4.5 ha, were monitored between 1991 and 2012 in the ...Triglav National Park (Slovenia, Central Europe). The lakes are located on limestone bedrock, with no surface inflow or outflow. They range from ultra-oligotrophic to hypertrophic. They were stocked with fish between late 1920s and 1996. The zooplankton samples were collected as composites from the bottom to the surface at the deepest point of the lake, for both qualitative and quantitative analyses. In situ physical parameters in the water column were measured, and the samples for chemical analyses were collected in parallel with the zooplankton sampling. Thirty-two species, including Copepoda, Cladocera, Rotifera and Ciliata, were recorded. They belonged to three ecological groups: (1) constitutive, (2) scout and (3) benthic species. In some of the lakes, the species composition remained stable over the study period, but in lakes stocked with fish, significant changes occurred, in both species composition and biomass. Large-bodied species of Copepoda and Cladocera were eliminated by fish allowing small-bodied planktonic species of Copepoda, Cladocera and Rotifera to dominate the community, along with benthic species, associated with algal mats. The lake, stocked with fish in the 1920s, was hit by two strong consecutive earthquakes, in 1998 and 2004, after which a significant change in species composition and biomass was recorded.
Thirteen mountain lakes, originally fishless, at 1325 and 2150 m a.s.l., with the maximum depths ranging from two to 15 m, and areas of 0.3 to 4.5 ha, were monitored between 1991 and 2012 in the ...Triglav National Park (Slovenia, Central Europe). The lakes are located on limestone bedrock, with no surface inflow or outflow. They range from ultra-oligotrophic to hypertrophic. They were stocked with fish between late 1920s and 1996. The zooplankton samples were collected as composites from the bottom to the surface at the deepest point of the lake, for both qualitative and quantitative analyses. In situ physical parameters in the water column were measured, and the samples for chemical analyses were collected in parallel with the zooplankton sampling. Thirty-two species, including Copepoda, Cladocera, Rotifera and Ciliata, were recorded. They belonged to three ecological groups: (1) constitutive, (2) scout and (3) benthic species. In some of the lakes, the species composition remained stable over the study period, but in lakes stocked with fish, significant changes occurred, in both species composition and biomass. Large-bodied species of Copepoda and Cladocera were eliminated by fish allowing small-bodied planktonic species of Copepoda, Cladocera and Rotifera to dominate the community, along with benthic species, associated with algal mats. The lake, stocked with fish in the 1920s, was hit by two strong consecutive earthquakes, in 1998 and 2004, after which a significant change in species composition and biomass was recorded.
V knjigi, ki prinaša celovito predstavitev naših visokogorskih jezer, oceno njihovega ekološkega stanja in razlago dogajanj v njih skozi zgodovino, so zbrani rezultati več kot desetletnih raziskav 18 ...avtorjev. V delu je podan geografski opis in nastanek visokogorskih jezer, hidrološke povezave med njimi ter fizikalne in kemijske lastnosti jezerske vode. Opisano je življenje v njih in spremembe, ki so jih jezera doživela v zadnjih stoletjih, opozorjeno pa je tudi na problem onesnaževanja visokogorja.
Between 4th and 18th March 2014, an international group of biologists carried out a hydrobiological expedition to the Ounianga-Tibesti area of northern Chad (Africa). The Tibesti is a desert volcanic ...area, intersected by the beds of ancient rivers which were active in the Tertiary. In deep canyons there are small water bodies (gueltas/aguelmans), fed by rain and spring water. They are rich in zooplankton, benthos, and even fish, but their groundwater fauna has previously been unknown. Groundwater samples collected in the vicinity of one guelta contained Syncarida, Isopoda, and Copepoda. Among the latter, two new species were recognised, Haplocyclops (H.) henrii sp. nov. and Parastenocaris joi sp. nov., together with a third species, Pilocamptus schroederi (van Douwe, 1915), previously known only from the littoral zone and wet mosses of Lake Victoria. The Tibesti area is thus the third known location of P. schroederi. All these species have a Gondwanaland distribution and are probably relicts of the Tertiary fauna, formerly widespread in the Sahara. Together with descriptions of two new species, a detailed re-description of P. schroederi is presented, along with remarks on their ecology.
Two new species of copepods of the genus Elaphoidella Chappuis, 1929 were discovered in a cave and a spring in northeastern Thailand. The first species, E. phuphamanensis sp. nov., belongs to ...species-group VII sensu Lang. It is most similar to E. turgisetosa Petkovski, 1980 in the armament of the male third exopod of the fourth swimming leg and the shape and armament of the fifth swimming leg in both sexes. However, it is easily distinguished from other congeners by the segmentation of the first swimming leg, the endopod of the fourth swimming leg, and the armature of the third exopod of swimming legs 2–4 in both sexes. The second species, E. propecabezasi sp. nov., is located in species-group I sensu Lang, where the male does not have a transformed seta on the third exopod of the fourth swimming leg and the female fifth swimming leg has four baseoendopodal robust setae, unequal in length. It is most similar to E. cabezasi Petkovski, 1982 and E. paraaffinis Watiroyram, Sanoamuang and Brancelj, 2017 in having the same armature formula as endopods 1–2 of female swimming legs 1–4. However, the ornamentation of the anal operculum, the shape of the caudal ramus, and the armature of the fifth swimming leg in both sexes distinguish them from each other. A rare gynandromorphic specimen of E. propecabezasi sp. nov. was recorded, and a revised key to Elaphoidella species in Southeast Asia is provided.
Display omitted
•The niche of dominant species is an intuitive embodiment of water nutrient pattern.•Niche overlap index quantifies the boundaries between dominant species.•The effect of N: P ...accelerated the diffusion rate of Pseudoanabaena limnetica.•Application of niche-based theories and neutral-based theories to phytoplankton.•Results facilitate early warning of cyanobacteria blooms in karstic reservoirs.
In aquatic ecosystems, the dynamics of ecological parameters play an important role in community organization. To understand the changes in the phytoplankton community structure in karstic reservoirs, the Hongfeng reservoir in Guizhou plateau was monitored monthly from 2016 to 2019. The results showed that the dominant organisms in phytoplankton comprised five phyla and twelve species during 4 years, among which the proportion of abundance of Pseudoanabaena limnetica begin to rise in 2018 and reached 46.57% in 2019 (the highest during the study period). The niche breadth (0.259–0.925) and overlap value (0–0.991) of P. limnetica have an obvious seasonal trend and are significantly affected by environmental factors such as water temperature, nutrients, and interspecific competition. This is primarily reflected in the high adaptability of the dominant species to changes in the N:P concentration ratio in water. Variance Partitioning Analysis (VPN) results show that the diffusion degree of P. limnetica is the result of the interaction between internal (i.e. interspecific competition, with a contribution rate of 13.4%) and external (i.e. environmental factors, with a contribution rate of 86.6%). The greater the external influence, the higher the diffusion degree. The results of niche-based theories and neutral-based theories showed that the stable community structure (variance rate (VR > 1)) and the excessive fast diffusion rate of dominant species (migration rate (m = 0.84)) may lead to the risk of P. limnetica and other toxic filamentous cyanobacteria blooms. The results provide basic data for the study of early warnings regarding phytoplankton community succession and cyanobacteria blooms in large reservoirs in the karst areas.
The unsaturated zone in fissured (= karstic) aquifers continues to be a source of new species of Harpacticoida (Crustacea: Copepoda). The first species were discovered about 70 years ago in the ...Škocjanske Jame Cave in Slovenia. Intensive sampling of percolating water in caves there over the last 20 years has yielded several new species, some of them well adapted to that environment. The most recent studies revealed that such a specialised fauna is also present in other regions of Europe, South and North America, and Asia. In Europe, three genera belonging to the order Harpacticoida are characteristic of the unsaturated karstic zone: Morariopsis, Paramorariopsis and Elaphoidella. In this article, two highly specialised species of Elaphoidella are described. A detailed analysis of their ecology and morphological adaptations along with other species of the genus Elaphoidella from Slovenia is included, and comparisons are made with the epikarstic genera Morariopsis and Paramorariopsis.
Two new species of copepods of the genus Elaphoidella Chappuis, 1929 were discovered in a cave and a spring in northeastern Thailand. The first species, E. phuphamanensis sp. nov., belongs to ...species-group VII sensu Lang. It is most similar to E. turgisetosa Petkovski, 1980 in the armament of the male third exopod of the fourth swimming leg and the shape and armament of the fifth swimming leg in both sexes. However, it is easily distinguished from other congeners by the segmentation of the first swimming leg, the endopod of the fourth swimming leg, and the armature of the third exopod of swimming legs 2–4 in both sexes. The second species, E. propecabezasi sp. nov., is located in species-group I sensu Lang, where the male does not have a transformed seta on the third exopod of the fourth swimming leg and the female fifth swimming leg has four baseoendopodal robust setae, unequal in length. It is most similar to E. cabezasi Petkovski, 1982 and E. paraaffinis Watiroyram, Sanoamuang and Brancelj, 2017 in having the same armature formula as endopods 1–2 of female swimming legs 1–4. However, the ornamentation of the anal operculum, the shape of the caudal ramus, and the armature of the fifth swimming leg in both sexes distinguish them from each other. A rare gynandromorphic specimen of E. propecabezasi sp. nov. was recorded, and a revised key to Elaphoidella species in Southeast Asia is provided.
Harpacticoids are an important component of meiofaunal assemblages in hyporheic zone. The goal of this study was to investigate distribution patterns of interstitial harpacticoid assemblages from ...four pre-Alpine streams originating in the Dinaric Karst and flowing into the Ljubljanica River. The sampling was conducted in 2002 at 12 locations distributed at a distance of approximately 1 km along each stream including tributaries, at a depth of 30–60 cm in the wetted channel (three sites per location) and depths from 65 to 160 cm on the stream banks (one site per location) using a Bou-Rouch pump. Concurrently, the interstitial water’s physical and chemical parameters were measured at two sites within each location (streambed, streambank). A total of 24 harpacticoid species were found, 12 of which were stygobionts (i.e., species living exclusively in groundwaters). Among them, two previously unknown species for science were found. Harpacticoid assemblage composition, with the exception of those from the Iška stream, did not differ significantly between the streams, indicating interconnectivity of the interstitial milieu. Sediment structure, amounts of particulate organic matter, conductivity and redox conditions seemed to have certain impacts, indicating the importance of hydrological and geological settings for harpacticoid assemblages.
The Classical Karst (sensu stricto) represents a complex hydro-geomorphological unit as well as one of the best-known karstic systems in the world. For this reason, it was selected as a model area ...both for applied research and for the conservation of its highly diverse subterranean fauna. With this paper, we aim to provide an overview of groundwater fauna in the phreatic zone of the Classical Karst aquifer, based on all published material along with new surveys, and search for patterns of species distribution within hydrogeological subunits, with a focus on the potential use of species as tracers of hydrological connections and groundwater flowpaths. The Classical Karst, with an area of approximately 750 km
2
, and adjacent to alluvial and flysch areas provides habitats for 83 stygobionts (accompanied by 16 stygophiles) and is one of the richest hotspots for groundwater fauna across the globe. The rate of endemism within the area is very high (around 50%). Multivariate statistical analyses revealed the faunal turnover between hydrogeological subunits, as well as the effect of water flow regime. Our approach, using species turnover and the species indicator value, allowed us to recognise groups of indicator species, which can be considered as descriptors of aquifer type and habitat structure, as well as water flow regime and groundwater flowpaths.