Effects of light and substrate on the benthic diatoms in an oligotrophic lake: a comparison between natural and artificial substrates
Effects of light and substrate on the benthic diatoms in an oligotrophic lake: a comparison between natural and artificial substrates
Benthic diatoms form a particularly important community in oligotrophic lakes, but factors influencing their distribution are not well known. This study reports the depth distribution of living motile and total diatoms (living plus dead diatoms) on both natural (from sand to fine organic mud) and artificial substrates in an oligotrophic lake. On artificial substrates, motile diatom densities peaked in abundance (24–30 cells · mm?2) between 0.6 and 1.9 m depth; on natural sediment surfaces, motile diatoms were generally more numerous and peaked in abundance (925 cells · mm?2) at 1.3 m depth. Total diatom densities on artificial substrates were highest (1260 valves · mm?2) at 0.6 m depth, with very low values below 3 m depth; on natural sediment surfaces, total diatom abundances were generally much higher (21600 valves · mm?2) at 3 m depth and declined gradually with depth. Significant relationships were found between light and diatom densities on the artificial substrate. Ordination analysis indicated that substrate type significantly correlated with the variation of diatom composition on artificial and natural substrates. Our results suggest that in oligotrophic lakes, light influences benthic diatom abundance, whereas substrate type has more influence on benthic diatom composition.
benthic diatoms, light, motile/epipelic diatom, oligotrophic lake, substrate
1166-1177
Yang, Hong
2ea2c94c-8d28-4555-98f9-59b615b0cee7
Flower, Roger
84ff829e-69d3-4375-9f97-e34b6ce15dc8
1 October 2012
Yang, Hong
2ea2c94c-8d28-4555-98f9-59b615b0cee7
Flower, Roger
84ff829e-69d3-4375-9f97-e34b6ce15dc8
Yang, Hong and Flower, Roger
(2012)
Effects of light and substrate on the benthic diatoms in an oligotrophic lake: a comparison between natural and artificial substrates.
Journal of Phycology, 48 (5), .
(doi:10.1111/j.1529-8817.2012.01201.x).
Abstract
Benthic diatoms form a particularly important community in oligotrophic lakes, but factors influencing their distribution are not well known. This study reports the depth distribution of living motile and total diatoms (living plus dead diatoms) on both natural (from sand to fine organic mud) and artificial substrates in an oligotrophic lake. On artificial substrates, motile diatom densities peaked in abundance (24–30 cells · mm?2) between 0.6 and 1.9 m depth; on natural sediment surfaces, motile diatoms were generally more numerous and peaked in abundance (925 cells · mm?2) at 1.3 m depth. Total diatom densities on artificial substrates were highest (1260 valves · mm?2) at 0.6 m depth, with very low values below 3 m depth; on natural sediment surfaces, total diatom abundances were generally much higher (21600 valves · mm?2) at 3 m depth and declined gradually with depth. Significant relationships were found between light and diatom densities on the artificial substrate. Ordination analysis indicated that substrate type significantly correlated with the variation of diatom composition on artificial and natural substrates. Our results suggest that in oligotrophic lakes, light influences benthic diatom abundance, whereas substrate type has more influence on benthic diatom composition.
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Published date: 1 October 2012
Keywords:
benthic diatoms, light, motile/epipelic diatom, oligotrophic lake, substrate
Organisations:
Geography & Environment
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Local EPrints ID: 341738
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/341738
ISSN: 1529-8817
PURE UUID: 0a0f375a-5c23-4c59-a8e9-69a9e63e50a6
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Date deposited: 02 Aug 2012 15:38
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 11:43
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Author:
Hong Yang
Author:
Roger Flower
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