Zooplankton response to climate warming: a mesocosm experiment at contrasting temperatures and nutrient levels
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Other authors
Publication date
2015ISSN
0018-8158
Abstract
Zooplankton community response to the combined effects of nutrients and fish (hereafter N + F) at contrasting temperatures was studied in a long-term experiment conducted in 24 shallow lake mesocosms with low and high nutrient levels. We found a positive effect of N + F on zooplankton biomass, chlorophyll-a and turbidity. In contrast, zooplankton species and size diversity decreased with added N + F, as did submerged macrophyte plant volume inhabited (PVI). The community composition of zooplankton in high N + F mesocosms was related to chlorophyll-a and turbidity and to macrophyte PVI in the low N + F mesocosms. Macrophytes can protect zooplankton from fish predation. Compared to N + F effects, temperature appeared to have little effect on the zooplankton community. Yet analysis of community heterogeneity among treatments indicated a significant temperature effect at high N + F levels. The results indicate an indirect temperature effect at high N + F levels that can be attributed to temperature-dependent variation in fish density and/or chlorophyll-a concentration.
Document Type
Article
Language
English
Keywords
Biologia
Pages
18 p.
Publisher
Springer
Citation
Šorf, M., Davidson, T. A., Brucet, S., Menezes, R. F., Søndergaard, M., Lauridsen, T. L., et al. (2015). Zooplankton response to climate warming: A mesocosm experiment at contrasting temperatures and nutrient levels. Hydrobiologia, 742(1), 185-203.
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