15 research outputs found

    The Influence of the Lotic and Lentic Stretches on the Zooseston Flux through the Plitvice Lakes (Croatia)

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    We studied the influence of lotic and lentic stretches on zooseston flux in the karstic barrage Plitvice Lakes (Croatia). Three sampling stretches were selected: 1) a channel with low inclination; 2) water flow through a deep lake (retention), and 3) a channel with cascades and sharp inclination. At all sampling points of the three stretches, zooseston reached maximum abundance in September (up to 147.39 ind/m3). Rotifers dominated in both zooseston abundance (58 to 80%) and diversity (66 taxa), followed by crustaceans (23 taxa), predominantly Cladocera and Copepoda. Kruskal-Wallis test suggest statistically significant differences between the lentic and both lotic stretches in the biomass net flux of euplanktonic organisms. The net flux of benthic organism biomass and changes in the biodiversity index were significantly different between the lentic stretch and lotic stretch with high inclination. Lotic stretches had a greater influence on the increase of abundance and biomass of benthic and semiplanktonic organisms than on the decrease of euplanktonic organisms. Principal Components Analysis of the species environment relationship explained 66% of the variance by the two first axes, where axis 1 accounted for 39% and axis 2 accounted for 27% of the variance. Oligochaets, insect larvae, nematodes and total zooseston were associated with component 1, showing that their biomass was negatively correlated with discharge and dissolved oxygen concentration and positively correlated with temperature. Other taxa showed a similar correlation with component 1. Biomass of Cladocera, Copepoda, T. birostris, Polyarthra spp., K. cochlearis and rotifers was associated with component 2, and positively correlated with food resources such as chl-a, POM and DOM. The inference is that zooseston flux through Plitvice Lakes is a function of the hydrological and physiographical features of the stretches, as well as food resources from the lakes

    Aquatic Macroinvertebrates of the Sava River

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    The objective of this chapter is to present the data on aquatic macroinvertebrate communities along the Sava River, based on investigation performed during 2011 and 2012 at 12 sampling sites within the sector between Vrhovo (Slovenia) and Belgrade (confluence to the Danube). During our study 227 macroinvertebrate taxa were recorded in the Sava River. Having in mind that upper stretch of the Sava River was not covered by this work (alpine and subalpine stretch), as well as based on the review of previous works on the macroinvertebrate fauna of the Sava River, more than 300 species will be confirmed for the Sava River. The data on the distribution of aquatic macroinvertebrates revealed five different stretches—alpine, subalpine, Upper Sava plain, Middle Sava and Lower Sava. Physical habitat degradation, pollution and pressure caused by biological invasions were found to be the main factors of endangerment of aquatic macroinvertebrate fauna diversity. There is an obvious need for further investigation of the Sava River in order to complete the data on aquatic macroinvertebrates and to provide the basis for accurate assessment of environmental status of the river.Milačić R, Ščančar J, Paunović M, editors. The Sava River. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag; 2015. p. 335-59

    Assessment of microcystin distribution and biomagnification in tissues of aquatic food web compartments from a shallow lake and evaluation of potential risks to public health

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    The objectives of this study were: (1) to examine the distribution and bioaccumulation of microcystins in the main components of the food web (phytoplankton, zooplankton, crayfish, shrimp, mussel, snail, fish, frog) of Lake Pamvotis (NW Greece), (2) to investigate the possibility of microcystin biomagnification and (3) to evaluate the potential threat of the contaminated aquatic organisms to human health. Significant microcystin concentrations were detected in all the aquatic organisms during two different periods, with the higher concentrations observed in phytoplankton and the lower in fish species and frogs. This is the first study reporting microcystin accumulation in the body of the freshwater shrimp Atyaephyra desmsaresti, in the brain of the fish species common carp (Cyprinus carpio) and in the skin of the frog Rana epirotica. Although there was no evidence for microcystin biomagnification, the fact that microcystins were found in lake water and in the tissues of aquatic organisms, suggests that serious risks to animal and public health are possible to occur. In addition, it is likely to be unsafe to consume aquatic species harvested in Lake Pamvotis due to the high-concentrations of accumulated microcystins

    Mayfly emergence along an oligotrophic Dinaric karst hydrosystem: spatial and temporal patterns, and species–environment relationship

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    Mayfly emergence was studied in the Plitvice Lakes National Park (Croatia) monthly over a 2-year period in four habitats (springs, streams, mountainous rivers, tufa barriers) using monthly collections of emergence traps. A total of 12 mayfly taxa were recorded. Almost half of the collected specimens belonged to the genus Baetis Leach, 1815, which was recorded at every site, but we were unable to distinguish between two included species (B. rhodani and B. cf. nubecularis). Other abundant species were Centroptilum luteolum (Muller, 1776), Alainites muticus (Linnaeus, 1758), Habrophlebia lauta Eaton 1884, Paraleptophlebia submarginata (Stephens, 1835), Serratella ignita (Poda, 1761), Ephemera danica Muller, 1764 and Rhithrogena braaschi Jacob, 1974. The mayfly assemblages at all sites were dominated by species typical of the rhithral zone, but there was a shift in species composition along a longitudinal gradient (from 720 to 390 m a.s.l.) from dominance of eucrenal-epirhithral to metarhithral-hyporhithral elements and finally to appearance of metapotamal and littoral elements. Two environmental factors, maximum water temperature and mean pH, had the highest influence on the mayfly assemblages. Emergence mainly occurred between March and November and was related to the elevated water temperature. Emergence patterns of some species were in accordance with their typical Central European emergence patterns (e.g. S. ignita, H. lauta) while some others showed certain discrepancies (e.g. longer emergence period in Rh. braaschi and P. submarginata, one generation emergence in A. muticus and variable emergence patterns between the sites and between the two studied years in C. luteolum). The current study provides a significant contribution to the knowledge of mayfly ecology in karst freshwater habitats which forms a basis for further investigation and monitoring of mayflies in this area
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