1. Effects of silver carp (Hypophthalmichthys molitrix) and nutrients on the plankton community of a deep, tropical reservoir: an enclosure experiment
- Author
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Shuai-Ying Zhao, Yu-Ping Sun, Bo-Ping Han, and Qiu-Qi Lin
- Subjects
Biomass (ecology) ,Silver carp ,Hypophthalmichthys ,biology ,Ecology ,fungi ,Aquatic Science ,Plankton ,biology.organism_classification ,Zooplankton ,Animal science ,Fish stocking ,Phytoplankton ,Eutrophication - Abstract
Summary 1. An in situ enclosure experiment was conducted in a deep reservoir of southern China to examine (i) the effects of a low biomass (4 g wet weight m−3) of silver carp (Hypophthalmichthys molitrix) and nutrients on the plankton community and (ii) the response of Daphnia to eutrophication. 2. In the absence of fish, Daphnia galeata dominated the zooplankton community, whereas calanoids were dominant in the fish treatments, followed by D. galeata. Silver carp stocking significantly reduced total zooplankton biomass, and that of D. galeata and Leptodorarichardi, but markedly increased the biomass of smaller cladocerans, copepod nauplii and rotifers. In contrast, nutrient enrichment had no significant effect on the plankton community except for cyclopoids. 3. Chlorophyta, Cryptophyta and Bacillariophyta were dominant phytoplankton groups during the experiment. Chlorophyta with high growth rates (mainly Chlorella vulgaris in the fish enclosures and Ankyra sp. in the fishless enclosures) eventually dominated the phytoplankton community. Total phytoplankton biomass and the biomass of edible phytoplankton [greatest axial linear dimension (GALD)
- Published
- 2012