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Factors limiting
phytoplankton productivity in 49 shallow reservoirs of North
Cote d'Ivoire
(West Africa)
R. Arfi*a, M.
Bouvyb, P. Cecchib,
M. Pagnaoa, S. Thomasb
aInstitut de Recherche pour le Développement
(IRD), Station Marine d'Endoume, rue de la Batterie des Lions,
13007 Marseille, France.
bCentre IRD, 911 avenue Agropolis, 34032 Montpellier cedex,
France
*Corresponding author
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Abstract
Several hundred ranching reservoirs are scattered in
North Côte d'Ivoire, where they have an increasing economical
importance as water resources during the dry season. To obtain a
synoptic view of their limnological characteristics and to identify
key factors limiting algal productivity, 49 of these shallow reservoirs
were sampled once in 1997 at the end of the dry season. They showed
low conductivity (range 40 - 230 µS cm-1)
and low pH (range 5.1 - 7.3), and lakes deeper than 2 m were stratified.
Most lakes had low nutrient concentrations (median: 0.09, 3.49 and
0.44 µM, for NO3-N, NH4-N
and PO4-P, respectively). They were
very turbid, with most of Secchi depths ranging between 0.1 and
0.4 m, and had high seston weights (median, 45 mg 1-1).
Many lakes had high chlorophyll concentrations (median, 106 µg
1-1), and some of them featured
algal blooms, while many lakes had primary production value <1000
mg C m-2 d-1.
Algae of size >10 µm represented about 50 percent of the
chlorophyll biomass and phytoplankton production. Classification
on hydrological and particle data identified five groups based on
depth, turbidity and productivity. During the dry season, the initial
nutrient pulse linked to the annual flood is exhausted. At this
time of the year, phytoplankton production was nitrate limited in
some lakes, while in some others, phosphorus was limiting. Deep
sites (>2 m) were less turbid and less productive than shallow
ones (<2 m). In shallow unstratified lakes showing a nutrient-rich
bottom layer, easy vertical mixing allow a regular enhancement of
the algal productivity. In deeper and stratified lakes, nutrient
enrichment only occurs when high intensity winds induce vertical
mixing, and their productivity is directly related to these episodic
nutrient pulses.
Keywords: limiting factors, trophic state
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