Saline lakes of the Paroo,inland New South Wales,Australia |
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Authors: | B. V. Timms |
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Affiliation: | (1) Sciences Department, Avondale College, Cooranbong, N.S.W., 2265, Australia |
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Abstract: | Twenty-five lakes from fresh to crystallizing brine in the semi-desert of northwestern New South Wales, Australia, were studied regularly for 27 months. The lakes are small, shallow and ephemeral. Chemically waters are mainly of the NaCl type. Seventy-four species of invertebrate occur in saline waters (>3 g l–1) with crustaceans such as Parartemia minuta, Apocyclops dengizicus, Daphniopsis queenslandensis, Diacypris spp. and Reticypris spp. dominant, particularly at higher salinities. The insects Tanytarsus barbitarsis and Berosus munitipennis are also important in meso- and hypersaline lakes. They are joined in hypo- and mesosaline waters by many others, including more beetles, odonatans, trichopterans, pyralids, notonectids, and corixids. Species richness declines with increasing salinity. There is a prominent inland faunal component mainly of crustaceans, including P. minuta, D. queenslandensis, R. walbu, Trigonocypris globulosa and Moina baylyi. |
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Keywords: | saline lakes water chemistry flora fauna biogeography |
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