7 research outputs found
Alien species in the ichthyofauna of northwestern part of the Azov Sea basin
There are nine alien species in the region of the study. The distribution and abundance of nonnative fish in the reservoirs of northwestern part of the Azov Sea basin depends on the scale of fishing industry
activities, the degree of transformation of hydroecosystems, and the water release into the rivers from irrigation canals. There are three groups of species registered according to the number indices in the water areas of the basin. The first is the species the findings of which are rare in the region; the second group comprises fish the number of which depends on fishing industry activities; and the third one embraces the species that are high in the number and their self-reproducing populations exist
Past and Current Changes in the Largest Lake of the World: The Caspian Sea: Chapter 3
International audienceThe Caspian Sea (CS), located between Europe and Asia, is the largest lake in the world; however, its physical environment and its floor have oceanic characteristics. The CS is composed of a very shallow north basin with a very low salinity mostly below 5 psu. The middle and southern basins are deep and have a salinity of c. 13 psu. To the east, the Kara-Bogaz-Gol, a hypersaline lagoon, is connected to the middle basin. The CS is endorheic and therefore very sensitive to changes in hydrography and climate. Because of its long history of isolation following the disconnection of the Caspian Sea from the Paratethys c. 6 Ma ago, this ancient lake has many endemic species. The harsh environment of its brackish waters and the repeated salinity changes over the millennia however do not allow for a high biodiversity. The benthos is more varied than the plankton. The history of water-level changes remains poorly known even for the last centuries. Nevertheless, the amplitude was of >150 m in the Quaternary, several 10 s of m in the Holocene and several m in the last century. Many factors affect its natural state, such as petroleum pollution (an industry dating back to Antiquity), nutrient increase (alongside >14 million inhabitants along the coast), invasive species (e.g. the comb jelly Mnemiopsis leidyi), overfishing (including sturgeon) and modifications of its coastline (e.g. sand extraction). In comparison to other ancient lakes, the CS surface temperature has suffered from the fastest increase on record. Owing to the complex natural state of the CS, it is not easy to identify the Holocene-Anthropocene transition, although it may be suggested that is was approximately AD1950 when intense human activity started to modify the lake