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  Journal > Table of Contents > Volume 11 Issue 1 > Abstract
 


Relationship between phytoplankton paleoproduction and diversity in contrasting trophic states

Biplob Das1,2*, Rick Nordin1 and Asit Mazumder1

1Water and Aquatic Sciences Research Program, Department of Biology, University of Victoria, P.O. Box 3020, Station CSC, Victoria, B.C. Canada V8W 3N5
2Saskatchewan Environment, 3211 Albert Street, Regina, Saskatchewan, S4S 5W6

*Corresponding author: biplobdas@gmail.com

Abstract

   With the increasing rate of species extinctions following anthropogenic perturbation, there is a growing interest in biodiversity research. Although productivity and species richness relationship have been tested and applied in contemporary aquatic ecological studies, none have been applied to paleoecology with contrasting trophic states. The present study explores the applicability of contemporary production and species richness relationship in high-resolution paleoecological records with low, intermediate and mid to high productive aquatic systems. Results from our study reveal that diatom species richness was positively correlated in low to intermediate productive lakes. In contrast, the relationship was hump shaped (unimodal) in a mid to high productive system concurrent with the species diversity analyses. Contrasting relationships between diatom species richness and stable isotope records (?13C and ?15N) suggested that the nutrient biogeochemical cycle might play an important role in controlling species richness. From fossil pigment records we show that the variations in algal functional group signatures were highest in intermediate state. Collectively, these results suggest that the hump shaped (unimodal) relationship between diatom species richness and production might be limited to high productive systems with maximum richness and diversity in intermediate states, which is also supported in contemporary studies. Moreover, fossil pigment records as proxies for algal functional groups reveal that in a mid to high productive system with intense watershed scale disturbances, community composition of algal functional groups declined favoring certain diatoms. Our results demonstrate the applicability of production and diversity relationship theory in paleo-perspective and that recent watershed scale land use changes might affect the species diversity in aquatic systems.

Keywords: fossil pigment, species richness, unimodal

 

 

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