Abstract:Zooplancton density and diversity from Salado and Negro rivers -Rio Paraná basin -ArgentinaZooplankton abundance and diversity of Salado and Negro rivers were compared in relation to the water level fluctuations. The zooplankton pumper samples were collected between March, 1993 and October, 1994. Mean zooplankton density at Salado river was very higher in upstreem. Zooplankton density in the Negro and Salado rivers were variable in the high water phase.Changes in the density appeared to be related to the hydr… Show more
In floodplains, the passive dispersal by drift occurs when water bodies become connected, and is a key feature offering pathways for the recolonization of periodically flooded habitats. Mesocosms with experimental flooding were used to document the succession of small invertebrates under differing hydrologic regimes with the intent of identifying which animals were capable of moving among habitats. The mesocosm experiments were performed in soils in sandy areas of the Salado-River basin including a mixed-use plot, a plot for breeding livestock, and a plot currently without any use located in different topographic positions (upper, middle, lower). Forty-seven taxa were found including ciliates, amoebae, rotifers, and microcrustaceans. The maximum total specific richness was recorded in middle soil and the minimum in upper soil because of a shorter colonization time. Higher mean densities occurred in middle and lower topographies, while the upper exhibited lower values. The ciliates and rotifers were the dominant. During the intermediate stage of flooding, the high density and biomass of the primary producers resulted in high concentration of dissolved oxygen (photosynthesis exceeded respiration). In contrast, in the final stage, low densities of microalgae led to low concentrations of dissolved oxygen and a high density of consumers (preponderance of respiration over photosynthesis). These flooded areas are significant as sources of microorganism inocula into the river. An abundance of microbiota arising from temporary wetlands and floodplains is fundamental for a successful recruitment of native-fish species.
a b s t r a c tWe examined the zooplankton abundance and composition of Laguna Grande, a floodplain wetland of the Lower Paraná Basin (Argentina), during an extraordinary drought-flood cycle that affected both the environment and the biological conditions of the lake. Low waters were characterised by remarkably high conductivities and pH values, and high phytoplankton and bacterioplankton abundances with cyanobacterial blooms, while high waters showed opposite features. In relation to zooplankton, the mean abundances of all the taxonomic groups (rotifers, cladocerans, copepods, ciliates, and heterotrophic nanoflagellates) were slightly higher at low waters. Major changes were observed in the specific composition of metazooplankton: the euryhaline species assemblage that dominated in the dry warm period was replaced by several oligohaline littoral and planktonic species characteristic of the Paraná River Basin, when the water level rose. Mean species richness values at high waters doubled those of low waters and were directly correlated to water depth. Most of the rotifers of the genus Brachionus and the cladoceran Moina micrura switched from parthenogenetic to sexual reproduction during low waters, as a response to a harsh environment and crowding. We suggest that the main changes in the environmental conditions in this eutrophic floodplain lake are driven by the hydrology, which regulates the zooplankton succession. The herein described shifts in the zooplankton structure and dynamics of Laguna Grande over an extraordinary drought-flood cycle contribute to the understanding of the processes that might occur under the scenarios predicted by climate change models.
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