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Water quality and planktonic microbial assemblages of isolated wetlands in an agricultural landscape
Authors
A Thouvenot
AE Liner
+36 more
AK Knox
AL Subalusky
CA Johnston
Carla L. Atkinson
CB Craft
CB Craft
D Moreno-Mateos
DF Whigham
F Anctil
GW McCarty
JB Johnson
JB Wallace
JC Makarewicz
JD Gaynor
JM Battle
JM Dorioz
JM Rose
KL Blann
KM Watt
LK Kirkman
LK Kirkman
M Palmer
Matthew R. First
MJ Kaeser
MM Brinson
PI Boon
PI Boon
RD Semlitsch
RJ Naiman
SG Leibowitz
SR Carpenter
Stephen W. Golladay
SW Golladay
TV Armentano
WJ Mitsch
WJ Mitsch
Publication date
1 July 2011
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
Abstract
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2011. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Springer for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Wetlands 31 (2011): 885-894, doi:10.1007/s13157-011-0203-6.Wetlands provide ecosystem services including flood protection, water quality enhancement, food chain support, carbon sequestration, and support regional biodiversity. Wetlands occur in human-altered landscapes, and the ongoing ability of these wetlands to provide ecosystem services is lacking. Additionally, the apparent lack of connection of some wetlands, termed geographically isolated, to permanent waters has resulted in little regulatory recognition. We examined the influence of intensive agriculture on water quality and planktonic microbial assemblages of intermittently inundated wetlands. We sampled 10 reference and 10 agriculturally altered wetlands in the Gulf Coastal Plain of Georgia. Water quality measures included pH, alkalinity, dissolved organic carbon, nutrients (nitrate, ammonium, and phosphate), and filterable solids (dry mass and ash-free dry mass). We measured abundance and relative size distribution of the planktonic microbial assemblage (< 45 μm) using flow cytometry. Water quality in agricultural wetlands was characterized by elevated nutrients, pH, and suspended solids. Autotrophic microbial cells were largely absent from both wetland types. Heterotrophic microbial abundance was influenced by nutrients and suspended matter concentration. Agriculture caused changes in microbial assemblages forming the base of wetland food webs. Yet, these wetlands potentially support important ecological services in a highly altered landscape.Funding was provided by the Joseph W. Jones Ecological Research Center.2012-07-2
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Last time updated on 08/06/2012
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info:doi/10.1007%2Fs13157-011-...
Last time updated on 01/04/2019