6533b7d9fe1ef96bd126cb4b

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Increase of rotifer diversity after sewage diversion in the hypertrophic lagoon, Albufera of Valencia, Spain

Maria Rosa MiracleRafael OltraMaría SahuquilloM. Teresa Alfonso

subject

biologyCladoceraEcologybusiness.industryBrachionus calyciflorusBranchiopodaSewageSpecies diversityRotiferbiology.organism_classificationbusinessEutrophicationDaphnia

description

The Albufera of Valencia is a large oligohaline hypertrophic lagoon, regulated by sluice gates according to the needs of the surrounding rice field cultivation. It is in a turbid state with permanent cyanobacterial blooms. A slight improvement was detected after diversion in the 1990s of part of the sewage flowing into it. After sewage diversion, we found that: (1) Chlorophyll concentration and rotifer densities decreased; (2) Rotifer proportions declined, due mainly to a relative increase in cladocerans; (3) Rotifer diversity increased. The two dominants of the 1980s, Polyarthra spp. in the colder period and Brachionus angularis in the warmer one, reverted after sewage diversion to a more diverse assemblage reminiscent of the 1970s, with a higher number of dominant species. In the summer of 1998, both Brachionus calyciflorus and its predator Asplanchna brightwelli, dominant in 1973, became abundant again. In 1998, an increase in the number of dominant species was also observed during water renewal periods, some of these species were new or seldomly found before in the lagoon (Proalides tentaculatus-digitus, Trichocerca pusilla at the end of rice culture, Brachionus variabilis at the end of winter flooding). Another change that indicates an improvement of water conditions is a more distinct and longer clear water phase, which occurs in the water renewal period at the end of winter and involves a Daphnia magna peak. The increased importance of this phase, promoted the flourishment of Brachionus variabilis, a facultative Daphnia epibiont never found before in the lake.

https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-010-0756-6_29