The Contribution of Ciliated Protozoa to Zooplankton Biomass in an Acidic, Subtropical Lake |
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Authors: | R. W. BIENERT JR. J. R. BEAVER T. L. CRISMAN |
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Affiliation: | (present address) Battelle Marine Science Laboratory, 439 West Sequim Bay Road, Sequim, Washington 98382;Life Systems, Inc., 24755 Highpoint Road, Cleveland, Ohio 44122;Department of Environmental Engineering Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611 |
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Abstract: | Ciliated protozoa accounted for up to 50% of the mean daily zooplankton biomass in McCloud Lake, a small (5 ha), oligotrophic, acidic (pH 4.7) lake in north-central Florida. Food resources (algae and bacterioplankton) were limiting for crustacean and rotifer zooplankton during much of the year. Myxotrophic ciliates were a dominant component of the planktonic food web. Stentor niger , an uncommon species in the plankton of lakes, dominated the ciliate assemblage and usually comprised >90% of total ciliate biomass. Stentor niger always contained high densities of photosynthetic zoochlorellae and contributed an estimated 30% to the total autotrophic biomass. |
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Keywords: | Myxotrophy plankton Stentor niger. |
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