Ndiritu, G.G. 1,2,
N.N. Gichuki1, P. Kaur2
& L. Triest2
1National Museums of Kenya, Box 40658, Nairobi, Kenya.
E-mail: nmk@museums.or.ke
2Vrije Universiteit Brussels, Plant Science and Nature management,
B-1050, Brussels, Belgium. E-mail: gatereg@yahoo.comor
nmk@museums.or.ke
Response of diatom assemblages to environmental gradients
in Nairobi River, Kenya
Diatom assemblages can serve as useful indicators
of water quality. In order to determine changes in stream water
quality in an urban environment, diversity of epilithic diatom
communities on both natural and artificial substrates were sampled
in Nairobi River, Kenya in September 2000. Sampling of water and
diatoms was carried in almost equidistant sites along a 60 km
stretch of Nairobi River. Environmental data was explored by a
computer program Principal Correspondence Analysis (PCA) and stations
subjectively split into three groups: (1) headwater (sites1-2);
(2) mid-waters (sites 3-7); and lower reaches (sites 8-15). The
response of diatoms to environmental gradients were summarised
using Canonical Correspondence Analysis (CCA), direct-gradient
method (ter Braak and Verdonschot, 1990) and analysed using ANOVA.
Our results suggest that diatom assemblages can reflect major
types of environmental gradients and therefore can be used as
indicators of ecological conditions in streams and rivers. Diatom
assemblages, in both natural and artificial substrates, grouped
together in similar environmental conditions. Consequently, satisfactory
information can be obtained by the use of natural or artificial
substrates.