Enhancement of planktonic rotifers by microcystis aeruginosa blooms: An enclosure experiment in a shallow eutrophic lake

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Abstract

Enclosure experiments with three treatments (sediment addition, sediment + nitrogen enrichment, sediment + phosphorus enrichment) and unfertilized controls were performed in shallow hypereutrophic Lake Donghu during the summer of 2000. Dense Microcystis aeruginosa blooms occurred in all the enclosures during the experimental period but not in the surrounding lake water. Generally, the dominant rotifers were Polyarthra vulgalis, Filinia longiseta, Proales sp. and Asplanchna sp. at the beginning of the experiment, followed by a shift to Brachionus calyciflorus, Trichocerca similis, Cephalodella catellina and Anuraeopsis fissa, and finally to F. longiseta, Proales sp. and Keratella cochleris. M. aeruginosa blooms strongly suppressed the larger Diaphanosoma brachyurum but enhanced the development of the smaller cladocerans and rotifers that probably efficiently utilized organic matter from M. aeruginosa through the detritus food chain. The smaller cladoceran and rotifers coexisted successfully throughout the experimental period. © 2002, Copyright Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

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Liu, H., Xie, P., Chen, F., Tang, H., & Xie, L. (2002). Enhancement of planktonic rotifers by microcystis aeruginosa blooms: An enclosure experiment in a shallow eutrophic lake. Journal of Freshwater Ecology, 17(2), 239–247. https://doi.org/10.1080/02705060.2002.9663892

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