2016
DOI: 10.4081/jlimnol.2016.1544
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Repeated flood disturbance enhances rotifer dominance and diversity in a zooplankton community of a small dammed mountain pond

Abstract: The zooplankton community in a relatively small and mountain pond was studied during the spring growing season. To investigate which factors operate in the community structure, we explored several physical conditions, such as high inflows, and the biotic dynamics of the main zooplankton groups (i.e., rotifers, cladocerans and copepods). Two extreme flood events occurred during the investigated period and caused dramatic changes in physical conditions and reduction of the planktonic community abundances. The sh… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(22 citation statements)
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References 65 publications
(81 reference statements)
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“…Rotifers respond more quickly relative to larger zooplankton owing to their short generation times (Gillooly, ), better colonising abilities (Gabaldón et al., ), and their adaptability to short‐term environmental variability (Balkić, Ternjej, & Špoljar, ). Water‐level fluctuations affect rotifers (Frutos et al., ); they are expected to dominate after a high‐water period, recolonising the water column, reaching peak densities and reproducing rapidly at the expense of other species (Dickman, ; Frutos et al., ; Gabaldón et al., ). Three testate amoebae species had their density peaks coinciding mainly with the flood period pre‐dam when, in general, the other zooplankton groups were at their lowest densities.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Rotifers respond more quickly relative to larger zooplankton owing to their short generation times (Gillooly, ), better colonising abilities (Gabaldón et al., ), and their adaptability to short‐term environmental variability (Balkić, Ternjej, & Špoljar, ). Water‐level fluctuations affect rotifers (Frutos et al., ); they are expected to dominate after a high‐water period, recolonising the water column, reaching peak densities and reproducing rapidly at the expense of other species (Dickman, ; Frutos et al., ; Gabaldón et al., ). Three testate amoebae species had their density peaks coinciding mainly with the flood period pre‐dam when, in general, the other zooplankton groups were at their lowest densities.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In unimpounded ecosystems, the natural water flow and hydrological periods of floodplains can positively influence the diversity of aquatic organisms through the interaction of several factors that act at different spatial and temporal scales (Bunn & Arthington, ). For example, the natural flooding process reduces the interaction between organisms through dilution (Angeler, Alvarez‐Cobelas, Rojo, & Sánchez‐Carrillo, ; Quintana et al., ), thereby reducing competition and consequently, increasing biodiversity (Gabaldón et al., ). Moreover, flooding of areas adjacent to the main river also provides periodic connectivity between habitats, promoting biotic and abiotic homogenisation and favouring species dispersal (Bunn & Arthington, ), which may also reduce the risk of local extinctions (Braghin et al., ; Thomaz et al., ; Ward, Tockner, & Schiemer, ).…”
Section: Conclusion and Recommendations For Monitoring Programmes In mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Vertical profiles of the physicochemical characteristics of the water column (temperature, pH, oxygen; GRYF XBQ4, Havlíčkův Broc, CZ) and chlorophyll a (FluoroProbe TS-16-12, bbe Moldaenke, Kiel, Germany) were also taken. Site II: Jiřická pond (Czech Republic, 48.616034 N 14.676594 E) with 0.0356 km 2 , volume 6.59 x10 3 m 3 , pH 5.6-6.2, maximum depth 3.7 m, retention time ~5-7 days, dystrophic, located in the Novohradské mountains of Southern Bohemia [21]. Five samples were collected from the epilimnion (0.5m) from May 2016 to August 2017.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%