Authors
Luc Brendonck, Joachim Maes, Wouter Rommens, Nzwirashe Dekeza, Tamuka Nhiwatiwa, Maxwell Barson, Veerle Callebaut, Crispen Phiri, Kelle Moreau, Brian Gratwicke, Maarten Stevens, Nooike Alyn, Eddy Holsters, Frans Ollevier, Brian Marshall
Publication date
2003/10
Journal
Archiv Fur Hydrobiologie
Volume
158
Issue
3
Pages
389-405
Publisher
Schweizerbart'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung
Description
We compared abundance and diversity of phytoplankton, zooplankton, and fishes among limnetic (P: always without macrophytes) and littoral habitats with (L+) and without (L–) hyacinths in Lake Chivero, a man-made hypertrophic reservoir near Harare (Zimbabwe). In addition, the littoral macrophyte community, and macro-invertebrates associated with hyacinth mats were inventoried. The phytoplankton community was dominated by blue-green algae (mainly Microcystis aeruginosa), typical for a hyper-eutrophic lake. Total absolute densities were about 10 to 30 times higher at the L+ sites than at the unvegetated L–and P sites. On the basis of relative species abundances the L–zones were more similar to the P than to the L+ zones. There was an increasing importance of chlorophytes (Staurastrum sp. and Pandorina morum) and diatoms (Cyclotella meneghiniana and pennales) and a decreasing dominance of Mycrocystis along the discriminant axis from L+, L–to P. The zooplankton community was most dense in the unvegetated zones. Daphnids and bosminids were more abundant in the pelagic than in both littoral zones. Calanoids and Diaphanosoma were dominantly represented in the unvegetated zones. The two littoral zones were characterised by higher densities of chydorids, while they could be discriminated by the dominance of cyclopoids in the vegetated site. Seventeen different fish species were captured by at least one of the different fishing methods. Apparent habitat preferences differed ac-
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