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Flood intensity was a main factor determining access to the riparian/floodplain ecotonal resources of the upper Parana River, Brazil, and in consequence determining yield of the dominant trophic groups, which are fish feeding on flooded grasslands and on riparian fruits and leaves. Prey and predator density both declined in years of low floods, and predators did not recover until the next year of high flood, more slowly than in the case prey fish, most probably due to differences in life cycle length. The life cycle of one of the most importa.nt species, Curimba (Prochilodus lineatus -Characidae) depends on access to the floodplain lagoons and return to the reservoir after maturation for intensive growth. The riparian/floodplain habitat complexity and connectivity has great significance for fish community dynamics and fisheries yield. and may serve a reason to create a national park in the last floodplain section of the upper Parana River.
Throughout the world, estuaries and coastal waters have experienced degradation. Present proposed remedial measures based on engineering and technological fix are not likely to restore the ecological processes of a healthy, robust estuary and, as such, will not reinstate the full beneficial functions of the estuary ecosystem. The successful management of estuaries and coastal waters requires an ecohydrologybased, basin-wide approach. This necessitates changing present practices by official institutions based on municipalities or counties as an administrative unit, or the narrowly focused approaches of managers of specific activities (e.g., farming and fisheries, water resources, urban and economic developments, wetlands management and nature conservationists). Without this change in thinking and management concept, estuaries and coastal waters will continue to degrade, whatever integrated coastal management plans are implemented. To help in this process of change there is a need to (1) develop a profound understanding of the effects of biota and biotic processes on mediating estuary response to changing hydrology, sediment and nutrient flux and of the biota on hydrology at the river basin scale, and (2) to develop science-based remediation measures at the river basin scale, with elements of ecohydrology and phytotechnology at their core, to strengthen the ability of the biota to sustain and adapt to human-induced stresses.
Cyanobacterial blooms in drinking water reservoirs may cause a variety of water quality problems, including those of taste and odor, and can compromise the water supply destined for human consumption. In response to this problem an online monitoring tool for analyzing the cyanobacterial concentration in intake water is of practical value. This study demonstrated a positive correlation between phycocyanin fluorescence and cyanobacterial biomass during Microcystis aeruginosa blooms in a lowland drinking water reservoir, using online detection. The highest correlation coefficients were found for a cyanobacterial biomass concentration below 15 mg freshweight/L, indicating that this method can be an effective early warning system. Rapid changes in fluorescence were observed when wind drift moved higher cyanobacterial concentrations into the water intake, indicating that fluorescence could be employed as a quick warning for changed requirements for plant operations.
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