6533b82cfe1ef96bd128f624

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Meiofauna ratios as environmental indicators in the profundal depths of large lakes.

Jukka Särkkä

subject

Biomass (ecology)NaididaebiologyEcologyMeiobenthosGeneral MedicineManagement Monitoring Policy and Lawbiology.organism_classificationPollutionCladoceraBenthic zoneEnvironmental scienceProfundal zoneOxygen saturationHarpacticoidaGeneral Environmental Science

description

Two sets of samples from Lake Paijanne and one from Lake Ladoga were used to examine the relations between the meiofauna and environmental variables. The most obvious indicators of an unpolluted environment were, in order of importance, the true meiofauna/total meiofauna ratio, the proportion of Aeolosomatidae, the proportion of Harpacticoida (excluding C. staphylinus), the meiofauna/macrofauna biomass ratio, the proportion of Naididae and the A. crassa + P. schmeili/true meiofauna ratio. Conversely, the clearest indicators of a polluted environment were the proportion of resting stages of Cyclopinae, the Nematoda/non-resting Copepoda ratio, and the proportions of Tubificidae, Oligochaeta, Cladocera, C. staphylinus and benthic Eucyclopinae. Oxygen saturation exercised a highly significant effect on the meiofauna variables, and the next in order of importance were sedimentation, sediment chlorophenols originating from the chlorobleaching of pulp, total phosphorus, COD and phytoplankton biomass. The dependence of the meiofauna on environmental variables was somewhat more pronounced in the deepest areas of Lake Paijanne than in the epiprofundal zone, and largely similar in the two lakes.

10.1007/bf00414370https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24193580