1. La importancia de usar el biovolumen en estudios de fitoplancton y monitoreo ambiental de cianobacterias.
- Author
-
Bonilla, Sylvia and O'Farrell, Inés
- Subjects
- *
CYANOBACTERIAL blooms , *ENVIRONMENTAL monitoring , *BIOINDICATORS , *BIOMASS , *PHYTOPLANKTON - Abstract
Phytoplankton biomass is a variable used in ecological studies and in monitoring potentially toxic cyanobacterial blooms. Biomass indicators of this community range from general and indirect, such as chlorophyll a concentrations, to specific and quasi-direct measures such as biovolume. Based on the results of a survey addressed to Latin American scientists and technicians as well as a bibliographic search, we discuss the relevance of using biovolume as the most appropriate indicator of biomass, the effort of quantifying phytoplankton using different counting units and the implications for interpretation of the results. Individuals, cells and biovolume were the quantitative units used to report phytoplankton. The individual represents the natural biological unit of the organism (cells, coenobia, colonies or filaments) and has a wide size range. We strongly advise that the phytoplankton reported as individuals per unit volume can lead to conceptual misinterpretation, such as the underestimation of the biomass of blooms. As cells have a large variation in their sizes, it poorly correlates with biovolume or chlorophyll a concentration. Considering all these aspects is crucial when selecting quantitative bioindicators to monitor potentially toxic cyanobacteria. We strongly recommend the use of biovolume as a biomass indicator for phytoplankton in general and consider it imperative for monitoring cyanobacteria. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF