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The phytoplankton community as a bioindicator of health
conditions of Atezca Lake, Mexico
E. DíazPardoa,*, G. Vazquezb, E.
López-Lópeza
aLab Ictiología y Limnología,
Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas, IPN. Carpio
y Plan de Ayala, México, DF 11340, Mexico
bInstituto de Ecología, Km 2.5 Antigua carretera
a Coatepec, Ap. Post. 63, Xalapa, Veracruz, Mexico |
Abstract
Atezca Lake is located
in a mountainous zone of North-eastern Mexico. It is a small subtropical
monomictic system with a winter circulation period, and stratification
in spring and summer. The lake was first studied monthly during
two annual cycles in 1981 and 1983; biannual sampling was then conducted
in the stratification and circulation periods for 10 years (1984-1994)
in order to determinate the seasonal and annual succesional patterns
of the phytoplankton community.
Thermal behaviour was found to influence both physical and chemical
features. A high concentration of nitrates and phosphates occurred
at the beginning of the stratification period and decreased toward
late stratification. During die overturn period these nutrients
increased. These dynamics affected the phytoplankton assemblage
because bacillariophyceans and chlorophyceans were dominant in early
stratification, dinophyceans and cyanophyceans in late stratification
and bacillariophyceans and chrysophyceans were abundant at circulation.
The long term changes showed an increase in the thickness of the
anoxic hypolimnion; surface nitrates also diminished, whereas phosphates
tended to increase. From 1981 to 1986 the phytoplankton community
was dominated by chlorophyceans; however from 1990 to 1994 they
were replaced by cyanophyceans, especially Microcystis aeruginosa.
The results indicate that the lake has shown severe signs of eutrophication
in recent years. The prospects for recovery depend upon sewage input
control, hyplomnetic discharges and conservation of the forest in
the catchment area. © 1999 Elsevier Science Ltd and AEHMS.
All rights reserved.
Keywords: Mexico; Intermountain
subtropical lake; Algae succession; Long term changes
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