Water quality and spatial and seasonal dynamics in the largest water supply reservoir in Brazil and implications for diatom assemblages
Water quality and spatial and seasonal dynamics in the largest water supply reservoir in Brazil and implications for diatom assemblages
Aim in this paper we investigated how spatial factors and seasonal dynamics influenced the diatom community in a tropical deep environment of low productivity waters in Brazil.
Methods we used physical and chemical characteristics of the water and planktonic diatoms from 9 sampling stations during dry (austral winter) and wet (austral summer) seasons (N = 18) as the outline to identify water quality, spatial and seasonal patterns. To evaluate spatially and temporally integrated events from the recent past (approximately the last 5 years before sampling), and the species from diverse habitats of the system, we used diatoms from the surface sediment (top 2 cm, N = 9). Since we used the top 2 cm of surface sediment containing the dead diatoms that were deposited over recent past of the reservoir, seasonal sampling of the sediment was not needed.
Results during the dry season heavily silicified long colonial planktonic diatom species associated mainly with higher mixing depth, pH, and transparency dominated the plankton, whereas in the wet season the reservoir became stratified, favoring planktonic solitary diatoms with high surface volume ratios. For the sediment, a general pattern emerged where planktonic species dominated in the deep sections of the reservoir, and the abundance of benthic species in shallow areas near the tributaries increased.
Conclusions the diatom assemblages was mainly influenced by seasonal variations and mixing regime. Surface sediment samples provided longer-term information, and revealed habitat differentiation shaping diatom assemblages. Overall, the small centric planktonic Aulacoseira tenella (Nygaard) Simonsen stood out as the most abundant species in the entire reservoir in both, the plankton and the sediment, indicating that size and shape serve as adaptive strategies for buoyancy and nutrient uptake stand as a competitive advantage in deep low productivity environments.
Nascimento, Majoi de Novaes
40059943-f59a-49b2-8e7e-7b3d3f7f62af
Bush, Mark
993998ed-f863-4b27-8f6b-33f334ed0586
Bicudo, Denise de Campos
96dff47d-7574-4961-8afb-39d014d95dd7
26 April 2021
Nascimento, Majoi de Novaes
40059943-f59a-49b2-8e7e-7b3d3f7f62af
Bush, Mark
993998ed-f863-4b27-8f6b-33f334ed0586
Bicudo, Denise de Campos
96dff47d-7574-4961-8afb-39d014d95dd7
Nascimento, Majoi de Novaes, Bush, Mark and Bicudo, Denise de Campos
(2021)
Water quality and spatial and seasonal dynamics in the largest water supply reservoir in Brazil and implications for diatom assemblages.
Acta Limnologica Brasiliensia, 33.
(doi:10.1590/s2179-975x7120).
Abstract
Aim in this paper we investigated how spatial factors and seasonal dynamics influenced the diatom community in a tropical deep environment of low productivity waters in Brazil.
Methods we used physical and chemical characteristics of the water and planktonic diatoms from 9 sampling stations during dry (austral winter) and wet (austral summer) seasons (N = 18) as the outline to identify water quality, spatial and seasonal patterns. To evaluate spatially and temporally integrated events from the recent past (approximately the last 5 years before sampling), and the species from diverse habitats of the system, we used diatoms from the surface sediment (top 2 cm, N = 9). Since we used the top 2 cm of surface sediment containing the dead diatoms that were deposited over recent past of the reservoir, seasonal sampling of the sediment was not needed.
Results during the dry season heavily silicified long colonial planktonic diatom species associated mainly with higher mixing depth, pH, and transparency dominated the plankton, whereas in the wet season the reservoir became stratified, favoring planktonic solitary diatoms with high surface volume ratios. For the sediment, a general pattern emerged where planktonic species dominated in the deep sections of the reservoir, and the abundance of benthic species in shallow areas near the tributaries increased.
Conclusions the diatom assemblages was mainly influenced by seasonal variations and mixing regime. Surface sediment samples provided longer-term information, and revealed habitat differentiation shaping diatom assemblages. Overall, the small centric planktonic Aulacoseira tenella (Nygaard) Simonsen stood out as the most abundant species in the entire reservoir in both, the plankton and the sediment, indicating that size and shape serve as adaptive strategies for buoyancy and nutrient uptake stand as a competitive advantage in deep low productivity environments.
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
Published date: 26 April 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 503850
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/503850
PURE UUID: 8c3b35b4-2991-4ded-a3b8-fb5d5192f089
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 14 Aug 2025 16:48
Last modified: 15 Aug 2025 02:14
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Majoi de Novaes Nascimento
Author:
Mark Bush
Author:
Denise de Campos Bicudo
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics