Relating planktonic microbial food web structure in lentic freshwater ecosystems to water quality and land use |
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Authors: | Burns, Carolyn W. Galbraith, Lisa M. |
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Affiliation: | Department of Zoology, University of Otago, Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand |
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Abstract: | Relationships among picoplankton, protozoa, phytoplankton, plantnutrients, lake type, drainage basin morphology and land coverwere studied in 45 water bodies in South Island, New Zealandthat ranged from large, deep, ultra-oligotrophic lakes to shallow,macrophyte-dominated ponds and swamps. The biomasses of mostheterotrophic components of the pelagic microbial food webswere positively related to phytoplankton and features of thedrainage basin that enhanced nutrient input, and imply strongresource-driven structuring of pelagic microbial food webs.Prokaryotic picophytoplankton biomass was negatively relatedto indices of eutrophication, and the picoautotroph contributionto total microbial food web biomass declined with increasingtotal phosphorus concentration from 16.5% in deep lakes to <0.02%in swamps and ponds. Biomass ratios of (picoplankton plus protozoa):phytoplanktonranged from 40:60 in swamps and ponds to >70:30 in deep lakes,and indicate the potential importance of microbial food websin carbon transfer to higher trophic levels in deep, less productivelakes. Strong relationships exist between land use in the catchmentand pelagic microbial food web structure and biomass acrossa wide range in size and trophic state of water bodies in heterogeneouslandscapes. |
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