Zooplankton community structure during a transition from dry to wet state in a shallow, subtropical estuarine lake
Lake St Lucia is among the most important shallow ecosystems globally and Africa's largest estuarine lake. It has long been regarded as a resilient system, oscillating through periods of hypersalinity and freshwater conditions, depending on the prevailing climate. The alteration of the system...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Continental shelf research 2015-12, Vol.111, p.294-303 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Lake St Lucia is among the most important shallow ecosystems globally and Africa's largest estuarine lake. It has long been regarded as a resilient system, oscillating through periods of hypersalinity and freshwater conditions, depending on the prevailing climate. The alteration of the system's catchment involving the diversion of the Mfolozi River away from Lake St Lucia, however, challenged the resilience of the system, particularly during the most recent drought (2002–2011), sacrificing much of its biodiversity. This study reports on the transition of the St Lucia zooplankton community from a dry hypersaline state to a new wet phase. Sampling was undertaken during routine quarterly surveys at five representative stations along the lake system from February 2011 to November 2013. A total of 54 taxa were recorded during the study period. The zooplankton community was numerically dominated by the calanoid copepods Acartiella natalensis and Pseudodiaptomus stuhlmanni and the cyclopoid copepod Oithona brevicornis. While the mysid Mesopodopsis africana was still present in the system during the wet phase, it was not found in the swarming densities that were recorded during the previous dry phase, possibly due to increased predation pressure, competition with other taxa and or the reconnection with the Mfolozi River via a beach spillway. The increase in zooplankton species richness recorded during the present study shows that the system has undergone a transition to wet state, with the zooplankton community structure reflecting that recorded during the past. It is likely, though, that only a full restoration of natural mouth functioning will result in further diversity increases.
•The St Lucia system recently underwent a climatic shift from a dry to a wet state.•The system suffered drastic diversity loss during the freshwater deprivation crisis.•The resident estuarine community now resembles past records, indicating recovery.•Only restoration of natural mouth functioning is likely to restore the diversity lost. |
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ISSN: | 0278-4343 1873-6955 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.csr.2015.08.027 |