Rotifer Diversity in the Acidic Pyrite Mine Pit Lakes in the Sudety Mountains (Poland)

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Abstract

The diversity of rotifers was studied in three artificial water bodies (Azure Lake, Yellow Lake, and Purple Lake), which were once pyrite mines. The physicochemical parameters and the zooplankton composition of the water were determined. Azure Lake had a pH of 3.4–6.9, conductivity values of 165–194 µS cm− 1, and low concentrations of sulphate, calcium, magnesium, copper, and iron, while the other lakes had a pH of 2.6–2.9, a conductivity of 1636–3400 µS cm− 1, and high concentrations of sulphate (up to 2863 mg dm− 3), Cu (up to 2650 µg dm− 3), and Fe (up to 178.3 mg dm− 3). The rotifer community in the lakes comprised 27 taxa (15 in Azure Lake, 13 in Purple Lake and 14 in Yellow Lake). We also found two species that are rarely observed in Poland (Aspelta cincinator and Elosa spinifera), and three species commonly found in acidic water (E. worallii, Cephalodella delicata, and C. hoodi). The types of rotifers in Azure Lake differed from those in the other two lakes. The Shannon–Weaver biodiversity index (H′) was the highest in Purple Lake (H′ = 1.255) and lowest in Azure Lake (H′ = 0.455). The effect of some of the physicochemical parameters on rotifer diversity is discussed.

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Pociecha, A., Bielańska-Grajner, I., Szarek-Gwiazda, E., Wilk-Woźniak, E., Kuciel, H., & Walusiak, E. (2018). Rotifer Diversity in the Acidic Pyrite Mine Pit Lakes in the Sudety Mountains (Poland). Mine Water and the Environment, 37(3), 518–527. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10230-017-0492-y

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