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Distribution of Diatoms in a Forested Stream Containing a Series of Interconnected Lakes
Authors:Trick  Charles G  Creed  Irena F  Henry  Michael F  Jeffries  Dean S
Institution:(1) Department of Plant Sciences, The University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada;(2) Department of Geography, The University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada;(3) Present address: Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada;(4) Environment Canada, National Water Research Institute, Burlington, ON, Canada
Abstract:We explored the spatial variation in diatom communities withinthe Turkey Lakes Watershed (TLW). The TLW is a single watershed in an old growth sugar maple forest that contains an alternatingseries of stream and lake embayments. Near the outlet of each lake, we sampled pools and riffles to determine abundance and diversity of diatom communities along this hydrologic system. Diatom diversity, measured by Shannon-Weaver Index, richness andevenness, increased steadily downstream before eventually decreasing near the watershed outlet. Canonical CorrespondenceAnalysis indicated that diatom genera were correlated with streamchemistry. Upper reaches were the least productive, characterizedby lower pH (<7), higher N:P (113:1 to 124:1, dominated by complex forms of N), and high mean relative abundances of Eunotia spp., Tabellaria spp., and Pinnularia spp. Middle and lower reaches were more productive, characterized byhigher pH (>7), lower N:P (71:1 to 90:1, dominated by simple forms of N, e.g., nitrate-N), and high mean relative abundances of Cymbella spp. and Brachysira spp. Achnanthesminutissima (Kutz.) Hustedt, the most abundant species, and Navicula spp., Nitzschia spp., Gomphonema spp., and Frustrulia spp. were represented at all stream sites. Thisstudy revealed that within the TLW, a hydrologic system of the same stream order, the diatom community was influenced by a nutrient gradient, where the stream and its intervening lakes contributed to a shift from acidic, inorganic N-poor upper reaches to a circum-neutral, inorganic N-richer outlet. By imparting genera-specific stresses, stream flow (i.e. pools vs. riffles) further shaped the diatom community.
Keywords:diatom  dissolved organic carbon  evenness  longitudinal gradient  nitrogen  pH  phosphorus  richness  Shannon-Weaver Index  Turkey Lakes Watershed
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