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Assessing the health of a zooplankton community in a small
Precambrian Shield lake during recovery from experimental
acidification
D. F Malley & P. S. S. Chang
Freshwater Institute, Central and Artic Region, Department
of Fisheries and Oceans, 501 University Crescent, Winnipeg,
MB, Canada R3T 2ND
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Abstract
Acidified lakes recover chemically relatively quickly
following the reduction or cessation of acidic inputs. Although
fish, invertebrate, and phytoplankton communities are reported to
begin to return to preacidification states in chemically-improving
lakes, the process and extent of biological recovery are not well-documented.
The experimental acidification of Precambrian Shield Lake 223 (27.4
ha surface area; 14.4 m maximum depth) in the Experimental Lakes
Area in northwestern Ontario, provides an opportunity to compare
the zooplankton community prior to acidification with that during
progressive acidification and during chemical recovery. Acidified
with sulfuric acid from pH 6.47 (ice-free season mean) in 1976 to
pH 5.0 (1981 to 1983), Lake 223 has been allowed to recover in steps
of pH 5.5 (1984 to 1987), pH 5.8 (1988 to 1990), and pH 6.11(1991).
Total zooplankton biomass showed no trend to increase or decrease
during the acidification and recovery, but species composition changed.
Compared with species composition at pH 6.13 early in acidification
in 1977, the 'recovering' community at pH 6.11 in 1991 had the previously-dominant
cladoceran species present in very low numbers and had two newly-appearing
cladoceran species. The community had lost one species of calanoid
and gained none and lost two species of cyclopoids and gained two.
It appeared to lose four species of rotifiers and gain seven. In
nearby unmanipulated reference Lake 239 (56.1 ha; 30.4 in), species
shifts were recorded but they involved rarer species, not dominants
as in Lake 223. Although the zooplankton community in 1991 is in
a new state with respect to species composition, static measures
of total community biomass, contribution to biomass by the four
main taxonomic groups, per cent similarity to the preacidification
community (for crustaceans), and biomass of herbivores do not indicate
impairment of community health. Lowered species diversity for both
crustaceans and rotifers partially returned to preacidification
levels. Nevertheless, the rotifer community in 1991 was more dissimilar
to the preacidification community than was the crustacean community,
and carnivore biomass appeared to be depressed in Lake 223. The
Lake 223 zooplankton community at pH 6.11 in 1991 appears to be
in a state of flux.
Keywords: biomass, diversity, crustaceans, cladocerans, copepods,
rotifers testing
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