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Nutrient removal from polluted stream water by artificial aquatic food web system Full text
2009
Jung, Dawoon | Cho, Ahnna | Zo, Young-Gun | Choi, Seung-Ik | An, Tʻae-sŏk
For the removal of nutrients from eutrophic stream water polluted by non-point sources, an artificial aquatic food web (AAFW) system comprising processes of phytoplankton growth and Daphnia magna grazing was developed. The AAFW system was a continuous-flow system constructed with one storage basin of 3 m³ capacity, one phytoplankton tank of 3 m³ capacity, and one zooplankton growth chamber of 1.5 m³ capacity. The system was optimized by setting hydraulic retention time of phytoplankton tank as 3 days and D. magna density as 740-1000 individual l⁻¹. When the system was operated on eutrophic stream water that was delivering 471 g of total nitrogen (TN) and 29 g of total phosphorus (TP) loadings for 45 days, 250 g (53%) of TN and 16 g (54%) of TP were removed from the water during its passage through the phytoplankton tank. In addition, 64 g (14%) of TN and 4 g (13%) of TP were removed from the water by harvesting zooplankton biomass in the zooplankton growth chamber, resulting in significant overall removal rates of TN (69%), nitrate (78%), TP (73%), and dissolved inorganic phosphorus (94%). While the removal efficiency of the AAFW system is comparable to those of other ecotechnologies such as constructed wetlands, its operation is less limited by the availability of space or seasonal shift of temperature. Therefore, it was concluded that AAFW system is a highly efficient, flexible system for reducing nutrient levels in tributary streams and hence nutrient loading to large aquatic systems receiving the stream water.
Show more [+] Less [-]Grazing Potential—A Functional Plankton Food Web Metric for Ecological Water Quality Assessment in Mediterranean Lakes Full text
2019
Stamou, Georgia | Katsiapi, Matina | Moustaka-Gouni, Maria | Michaloudi, Evangelia
Grazing potential (GP, in % day−1) was estimated for the plankton communities of 13 Greek lakes covering the trophic spectrum, in order to examine its sensitiveness in discriminating different classes of ecological water quality. Lakes with high GP values exhibited high zooplankton biomass dominated by large cladocerans or/and calanoids while lakes with low GP values had increased phytoplankton biomass and/or domination of small-bodied zooplankton indicating intensive fish predation. GP successfully distinguished among ecological water quality classes (estimated using the phytoplankton water quality index PhyCoI) indicating its potential use as a metric for ecological water quality assessment. As a next step, PhyCoI index was modified to include GP as a metric in order to enhance the phytoplankton-based ecological status classification of lakes incorporating zooplankton as a supporting factor. The PhyCoI<inf>GP</inf> successfully assessed the ecological water quality in accordance with PhyCoI classification whereas it was significantly correlated with the eutrophication proxy TSI<inf>SD</inf> based on Secchi Depth. Thus, we propose to use the modified phytoplankton index PhyCoI<inf>GP</inf> for monitoring the ecological water quality of lakes.
Show more [+] Less [-]Grazing Potential—A Functional Plankton Food Web Metric for Ecological Water Quality Assessment in Mediterranean Lakes Full text
2019
Georgia Stamou | Matina Katsiapi | Maria Moustaka-Gouni | Evangelia Michaloudi
Grazing potential (GP, in % day<sup>−1</sup>) was estimated for the plankton communities of 13 Greek lakes covering the trophic spectrum, in order to examine its sensitiveness in discriminating different classes of ecological water quality. Lakes with high GP values exhibited high zooplankton biomass dominated by large cladocerans or/and calanoids while lakes with low GP values had increased phytoplankton biomass and/or domination of small-bodied zooplankton indicating intensive fish predation. GP successfully distinguished among ecological water quality classes (estimated using the phytoplankton water quality index PhyCoI) indicating its potential use as a metric for ecological water quality assessment. As a next step, PhyCoI index was modified to include GP as a metric in order to enhance the phytoplankton-based ecological status classification of lakes incorporating zooplankton as a supporting factor. The PhyCoI<sub>GP</sub> successfully assessed the ecological water quality in accordance with PhyCoI classification whereas it was significantly correlated with the eutrophication proxy TSI<sub>SD</sub> based on Secchi Depth. Thus, we propose to use the modified phytoplankton index PhyCoI<sub>GP</sub> for monitoring the ecological water quality of lakes.
Show more [+] Less [-]Rice-shrimp ecosystems in the Mekong Delta: Linking water quality, shrimp and their natural food sources Full text
2020
Leigh, Catherine | Stewart-Koster, Ben | Sang, Nguyen Van | Truc, Le Van | Hiep, Le Huu | Xoan, Vo Bich | Tinh, Nguyen Thi Ngoc | An, La Thuy | Sammut, Jesmond | Burford, Michele A.
Aquatic ecosystems are used for extensive rice-shrimp culture where the available water alternates seasonally between fresh and saline. Poor water quality has been implicated as a risk factor for shrimp survival; however, links between shrimp, water quality and their main food source, the natural aquatic biota inhabiting these ponds, are less well understood. We examined the aquatic biota and water quality of three ponds over an entire year in the Mekong Delta, Vietnam, where the growing season for the marine shrimp Penaeus monodon has been extended into the wet season, when waters freshen. The survival (30–41%) and total areal biomass (350–531 kg ha⁻¹) of shrimp was constrained by poor water quality, with water temperatures, salinity and dissolved oxygen concentrations falling outside known optimal ranges for several weeks. Declines in dissolved oxygen concentration were matched by declines in both shrimp growth rates and lipid content, the latter being indicative of nutritional condition. Furthermore, as the dry season transitioned into the wet, shifts in the taxonomic composition of phytoplankton and zooplankton were accompanied by declines in the biomass of benthic algae, an important basal food source in these systems. Densities of the benthic invertebrates directly consumed by shrimp also varied substantially throughout the year. Overall, our findings suggest that the survival, condition and growth of shrimp in extensive rice-shrimp ecosystems will be constrained when poor water quality and alternating high and low salinity negatively affect the physiology, growth and composition of the natural aquatic biota. Changes in management practices, such as restricting shrimp inhabiting ponds to the dry season, may help to address these issues and improve the sustainable productivity and overall condition of these important aquatic ecosystems.
Show more [+] Less [-]Food web efficiency differs between humic and clear water lake communities in response to nutrients and light Full text
2015
Faithfull, C.L. | Mathisen, P. | Wenzel, A. | Bergström, A.K. | Vrede, T.
This study demonstrates that clear and humic freshwater pelagic communities respond differently to the same environmental stressors, i.e. nutrient and light availability. Thus, effects on humic communities cannot be generalized from existing knowledge about these environmental stressors on clear water communities. Small humic lakes are the most numerous type of lake in the boreal zone, but little is known about how these lakes will respond to increased inflows of nutrients and terrestrial dissolved organic C (t-DOC) due to climate change and increased human impacts. Therefore, we compared the effects of nutrient addition and light availability on pelagic humic and clear water lake communities in a mesocosm experiment. When nutrients were added, phytoplankton production (PPr) increased in both communities, but pelagic energy mobilization (PEM) and bacterial production (BP) only increased in the humic community. At low light conditions, the addition of nutrients led to increased PPr only in the humic community, suggesting that, in contrast to the clear water community, humic phytoplankton were already adapted to lower ambient light levels. Low light significantly reduced PPr and PEM in the clear water community, but without reducing total zooplankton production, which resulted in a doubling of food web efficiency (FWE = total zooplankton production/PEM). However, total zooplankton production was not correlated with PEM, PPr, BP, PPr:BP or C:nutrient stoichiometry for either community type. Therefore, other factors such as food chain length, food quality, ultra-violet radiation or duration of the experiment, must have determined total zooplankton production and ultimately FWE.
Show more [+] Less [-]Water quality maintenance and food saving by recycling the waste matter of a rotifer [Brachionus plicatilis] ecosystem culture
1993
Yamasaki, S. (Kagoshima Univ. (Japan). Faculty of Fisheries) | Hirata, H.
Food web including metazoan parasites for a brackish shallow water ecosystem in Germany and Denmark: Ecological Archives E092‐174 Full text
2011
Zander, C Dieter | Josten, Neri | Detloff, Kim C. | Poulin, Robert | McLaughlin, John P. | Thieltges, David W.
This data set presents a food web for the Flensburg Fjord, a brackish shallow water inlet on the Baltic Sea, between Germany and Denmark. The system has a benthic and shallow water pelagic component. This food web has two noteworthy attributes: (1) inclusion of metazoan parasites and other infectious agents and (2) inclusion of ontogenetic stages of parasites with complex life cycles. Data on the free‐living assemblages and parasitism were gathered during original field sampling and supplemented with information from additional published sources and local expert knowledge. Taxonomic resolution is generally high, although some functional or taxonomic groups (e.g., phytoplankton, macroalgae, and several groups of birds) are lumped into single nodes. Each ontogenetic stage of parasites with complex life cycles is treated separately and coded accordingly. For each node, we have included additional information such as taxonomy, life history, residency, and seasonality. Further, for each link, we define a specific interaction type. The web contains 180 nodes, 123 species/assemblages, and 1577 realized links. Of the 123 species/assemblages, 6 are basal, 70 are free‐living, and 45 are infectious. We present the data and metadata in the system‐neutral format standardized by R. F. Hechinger and colleagues, and thus we recognize variables that are not represented in our data set but may be added by further study.
Show more [+] Less [-]Effects of urban demand for food and water on physicochemicals and biotic structure of riverine wetlands in the Pampean plain Full text
2022
Gómez, Nora | Siri, Augusto | Capítulo, Leandro Rodrigues | Colautti, Darío César | Alcalde, Leandro | Rodrigues Capítulo, Alberto | Donato, Mariano | Fernanda Álvarez, María | de Souza, Javier Ricardo García | Jensen, Roberto Francisco | Bauer, Delia Elena | Maroñas, Miriam | Paredes del Puerto, Juan Martín | Altieri, Paula | Armendáriz, Laura Cecilia | Benitez, Hernán Hugo | Cassano, María Julia | Cortese, Bianca | Di Giorgi, Hugo Daniel | Donadelli, Jorge Luis | Gelis, María Mercedes Nicolosi | García, Ignacio Daniel | Maiztegui, Tomás | Paracampo, Ariel Hernán | Sánchez, Rocío María | Sathicq, María Belén | Catanzaro, Ludmila Noelia Soledad Rodríguez
Riparian areas of riverine plains develop extensive floodable areas named riverine wetlands, which are essential to the water cycle balance and ecosystem dynamics. In this study, we contrasted the hydrological and physicochemical variables of riverine wetlands of both peri-urban areas impacted by intensive farming and those of rural areas with the indicators of the biotic structure (taxonomic richness, Shannon diversity and total density) of benthic diatoms, phytoplankton, zooplankton, macroinvertebrates, chironomids, fishes, turtles, and birds. The study was performed on riverine waters of the Pampean plain, Argentina, with four seasonal samplings conducted in 2017–2018. Our results showed that the significant deepening of the groundwater level caused by aquifer overexploitation in peri-urban areas, as well as the declining surface water quality with higher phosphorus and total nitrogen concentrations, affected the taxonomic richness, diversity, and total density of the biotic assemblages of riverine wetlands. The taxonomic richness of birds, turtles, phytoplankton, chironomids, and fishes was the most sensitive to land use. Phytoplankton, chironomid, and fish diversity showed the greatest differences between rural and peri-urban riverine waters, while the total density of chironomids and birds showed the greatest differences according to land use. The results suggest that the socioeconomic development in those riverine wetlands that still maintain conditions close to the natural ones needs to be subject to guidelines derived from integrated basin management and sustainable urban planning.
Show more [+] Less [-]Pelagic energy flow supports the food web of a shallow lake following a dramatic regime shift driven by water level changes Full text
2021
Across the globe, lake ecosystems are exposed to a variety of human disturbances. A notable example is shallow lakes where human-induced eutrophication or water level fluctuation may result in a switch from a clear-water, macrophyte-dominated state to a turbid, phytoplankton-dominated state. Yet, few investigations have described synchronous changes in biotic assemblage composition and food web framework under such a shift between alternative states. We used stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes to test the extent to which switching from macrophyte to phytoplankton dominance in Lake Gucheng, triggered by a water level increase, would alter ecosystem structure and change the basal resources supporting the food web. We found that invertebrates and fish compensated for a reduction of macrophyte and epiphyte resources by deriving more energy from the alternative pelagic energy channel, where benthic invertebrates act as crucial links between primary producers and higher consumers by transporting δ¹³C-depleted pelagic algae to the benthic zone. Although consumers can respond to large shifts in energy allocation and stabilize food web dynamics through their ability to feed across multiple energy pathways, our study suggest that energy subsidies may promote trophic cascades and enhance the stability of the turbid regime.
Show more [+] Less [-]Pulsed flow-through cultivation of Margaritifera margaritifera: Effects of water source and food quantity on the survival and growth of juveniles Full text
2021
Hyvärinen, Heini S. H. | Chowdhury, M. Motiur R. | Taskinen, Jouni
Conservation of the endangered freshwater pearl mussel (FPM) includes artificially rearing juveniles, but the pulsed flow-through (PFT) method, enabling the continuous renewal of water and food in culture containers, has not been applied to FPM. This study tested the PFT method in culture of FPM juveniles, and the effect of water source (tap vs well water) and food concentration (mixture of commercial phytoplankton products) on the survival and growth of juveniles. Beaker-specific survival rates varied from 0 to 100% (mean: 34%) and from 0 to 58% (mean: 16%) in the 1st (2-week) and 2nd (10-week) experiment, respectively. In the 1st experiment, juveniles attained statistically significantly bigger sizes and more than two times higher survival in well water than they did in tap water. In both experiments, the food concentration of 0.250 µl/l resulted in the highest survival (compared to other concentrations ranging from 0.125 to 0.500 µl/l). However, food concentration did not have a significant effect on size of juvenile FPM in either of the experiments. Results indicate that the PFT system is suitable for FPM rearing experiments, but its applicability to mass culture of FPM juveniles requires further investigation.
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