Title of article :
Zooplankton community structure and biomass in a southern African temporarily open/closed estuary
Author/Authors :
P. W. Froneman، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
The zooplankton community structure and biomass in the upper, middle and lower reaches of the temporarily open/closed
Kasouga estuary were investigated monthly over a period of one year. Multiple range tests performed after ANOVA indicated that
there were no distinct spatial patterns in the physico-chemical and biological variables during the study (P > 0:05). Total
chlorophyll-a (chl-a) concentration and zooplankton biomass during the investigation ranged between 0.91 and 5.92 mg chl-am 3
and between 19.51 and 103.50 mg Dwtm 3, respectively. The highest levels (O3 mg chl-am 3; O45 mg Dwtm 3) were consistently
recorded during summer and the lowest (!2.5 mg chl-am 3; !40 mg Dwtm 3) during winter and during those periods when the
estuary breached. Zooplankton community structure was strongly linked to the presence/absence of a link to the marine
environment. In the absence of any link to the sea, the zooplankton community was almost entirely dominated by copepods (mainly
Pseudodiaptomus hessei, Acartia longipatella and Halicyclops spp.), which comprised between 72 and 97% of the total zooplankton
biomass. The inflow of seawater into the estuary following overtopping or breaching coincided with an increase in the contribution
of mysids, amphipods and fish larvae to the total zooplankton biomass. Hierarchical cluster analysis identified three distinct
zooplankton groupings during the study. These groupings corresponded to the summer and winter communities and a community
associated with overtopping and breaching events. SIMPER analysis indicated that the differences between the summer and winter
communities reflect changes in the relative contributions of the dominants as opposed to the presence/absence of species. The
overtopping/breaching group was characterized by the presence of larvae of marine breeding invertebrates and fish. These data
indicate that the zooplankton community structure and biomass in the temporarily open/closed Kasouga estuary are determined by
the interactive effects of freshwater inflow, water temperature and mouth status.
Keywords :
Zooplankton , temporarily open/closed estuary , southern Africa
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science