Spatial and temporal variation in algal-assemblage structure in isolated dryland river waterholes, Cooper Creek and Warrego River, Australia


Autoria(s): McGregor, G. B.; Marshall, J. C.; Thoms, M. C.
Data(s)

01/01/2006

Resumo

The scale at which algal biodiversity is partitioned across the landscape, and the biophysical processes and biotic interactions which shape these communities in dryland river refugia was studied on two occasions from 30 sites in two Australian dryland rivers. Despite the waterholes studied having characteristically high levels of abiogenic turbidity, a total of 186 planktonic microalgae, 253 benthic diatom and 62 macroalgal species were recorded. The phytoplankton communities were dominated by flagellated cryptophytes, euglenophytes and chlorophytes, the diatom communities by cosmopolitan taxa known to tolerate wide environmental conditions, and the macroalgal communities by filamentous cyanobacteria. All algal communities showed significant differences between catchments and sampling times, with a suite of between 5 and 12 taxa responsible for similar to 50% of the observed change. In general, algal assemblage patterns were poorly correlated with the measured environmental variables. Phytoplankton and diatom assemblage patterns were weakly correlated with several waterhole geomorphic measures, whereas macroalgal assemblage patterns showed some association with variability in ionic concentration.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:80896

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

CSIRO

Palavras-Chave #Algae #Cyanobacteria #Dryland Rivers #Epipelic Diatoms #Epixylic Diatoms #Floodplain Waterholes #Lake Eyre Basin #Macroalgae #Murray-darling Basin #Phytoplankton #Refugia #Fisheries #Limnology #Marine & Freshwater Biology #Oceanography #Zone Floodplain River #Environmental Relationships #Phytoplankton Assemblages #Community Structure #Shallow Lakes #Diversity #Variability #Patterns #Victoria #Ecology #C1 #270701 Freshwater Ecology #770300 Marine Environment #0405 Oceanography #0602 Ecology #0704 Fisheries Sciences
Tipo

Journal Article