Author/Authors :
Juana Mireya Mendoza-Vera، نويسنده , , Samba Kâ، نويسنده , , Corinne Cuoc، نويسنده , , Marc Bouvy، نويسنده , , Marc Pagano، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Pseudodiaptomus hessei is a key species in many water bodies in the Senegal River hydrosystem but it
became rare or completely disappeared from two ecosystems (Lake Guiers and Dakar Bango Reservoir;
Senegal, West Africa) after major hydrological changes caused by human action, mainly impoundments
on the river in 1985, and the opening of a new estuary mouth in 2003. Kaˆ et al. [Kaˆ, S., Pagano, M., Ba, N.,
Bouvy, M., Leboulanger, C., Arfi, R., Thiaw, O.T., Ndour, E.H.M., Corbin, D., Defaye, D., Cuoc, C., Kouassi, E.,
2006. Zooplankton distribution related to environmental factors and phytoplankton in a shallow tropical
lake (Lake Guiers, Senegal, West Africa). International Review of Hydrobiology 91(5), 389–405] put
forward several hypotheses to explain the reasons for this decline: salinity and chemical changes in the
water, predation by a cyclopid predator Mesocyclops ogunnus and/or the inhibiting effects of cyanobacteria
and/or diatoms (allelopathy). This study assessed these hypotheses by studying the distribution
of P. hessei in 13 stations (including the Dakar Bango reservoir and Lake Guiers) in relation to physical,
chemical and biological (phyto- and zooplanktons) factors at each station. We produced a distribution
pattern for this species in the Senegal River hydrosystem. Rank correlations and principal component
analysis showed that P. hessei was not correlated with conductivity but was positively correlated with pH
and alkalinity, suggesting chemical effects. The clear association with two filamentous cyanobacteria
(Cylindrospermopsis raciborskii and Anabaena sp.) did not appear to support the hypothesis of cyanobacteria
inhibition but blooming conditions were never encountered during the study. Negative correlation
with diatoms (especially with Fragilaria sp.) suggested that aldehyde producing diatoms had
a negative effect. Negative correlations with cyclopids such as Mesocyclops supported the hypothesis of
cyclopid predation to explain the decline of P. hessei. This study proposes several lines of research for
future studies to test these hypotheses.