Cyprinid fishes as samplers of benthic diatom communities in freshwater streams of varying water quality

2003 ◽  
Vol 60 (2) ◽  
pp. 117-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ted C Rosati ◽  
Jeffrey R Johansen ◽  
Miles M Coburn

The diatom composition of natural substrates in streams of different water qualities was compared among samples collected by researchers and samples collected from the intestine contents of three species of Cyprinid fishes: Campostoma anomalum, Pimephales notatus, and Semotilus atromaculatus. Campostoma and Pimephales were found to be robust samplers that efficiently collected diverse, representative diatom samples. Semotilus were adequate diatom samplers but collected the most diverse samples. In no instance were water-quality indices calculated from Pimephales samples significantly different from human-collected composite samples, whereas Campostoma and Semotilus samples diverged slightly from human-collected composite samples. Internal similarities of fish-collected samples were not significantly higher than those of human-collected samples, indicating that the fish were indiscriminately foraging on diatoms. Furthermore, samples clustered primarily by stream, indicating that fish-collected samples of diatoms were as representative of the stream as those collected by human researchers. By all standards measured in this study, these three fish species sample the benthic diatom community of mid-order streams with a facility equal to that of trained ecologists.

Author(s):  
Shuhan Guo ◽  
Fengzhi He ◽  
Tao Tang ◽  
Lu Tan ◽  
Qinghua Cai

Understanding temporal dynamics of community may provide insights on biological responses under environmental changes. However, our knowledge on temporal dynamics of river organisms is still limited. In the present study, we employed a multivariate time-series modeling approach with a long-term dataset (i.e. 72 consecutive months) to investigate temporal dynamics of benthic diatom communities in four sites located in a Chinese mountainous river network. We hypothesized that: (1) there are multi-scale temporal dynamics within the diatom community; (2) intra-annual fluctuations dominate the community dynamics; (3) diatom species composing the community respond distinctly to environmental changes. We found that intra-annual fluctuations with periodicities <12 months explained 8.1–16.1% of community variation. In contrast, fluctuations with periodicities of 13–36 months and 37–72 months only accounted for 1.1–5.9% and 2.8–9.7% of variance in diatom community dynamics, respectively. Taxa correlating significantly to each significant RDA axis (namely, RDA taxa group) displayed distinct temporal dynamics. Conductivity, total nitrogen, and pH were important to most RDA taxa groups across the four sites while their effects were group-specific. We concluded that intra-annual dynamics dominated temporal variation in diatom communities due to community responses to local environmental fluctuations. We suggest that long-term monitoring data are valuable for identifying multiple-scale temporal dynamics within biological communities.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nadieh de Jonge ◽  
Martin Hesselsøe ◽  
Jeppe Nielsen

The Water Framework Directive dictates that all European surface waters must have an ecological quality of good or better. The need for regular and comparable ecological quality assessments drives the development of DNA-based approaches for biomonitoring in freshwater systems. Water quality assessments are traditionally based on biological quality elements (BQE) such as fish, plants and other fauna. Previous studies have shown the potential of metabarcoding as a potential supplement to traditional morphology-based approaches to determine water quality indices. Metabarcoding of the macroinvertebrate community on unsorted bulk samples has the ability to profile freshwater streams into at least 7 water quality categories Kuntke et al. (2020). A follow-up study using the same locations shows that a broad range barcode targeting the ribosomal 16S/18S RNA genes simultaneously demonstrated that ecological quality is reflected in all environmental DNA; the eukaryotic communities, and perhaps even more so, in the microbiome of the sampled streams (unpublished). The relationship between water quality and microbial communities is well-known, but not well-described. Healthy compositions of microbiota are vital for the functioning of many organisms, and this principle extends to the ecosystem level as well. The microbiome of freshwater streams therefore represents a great untapped potential in the development of DNA-based monitoring methods. The aim of this work was to explore links between water quality, environmental DNA collected from bulk and sediment samples, as well as individual macroinvertebrates with relevance for freshwater streams. Previous work on invertebrate communities Kuntke et al. (2020), and bulk sample analysis (total 53 streams) (unpublished) was combined with metabarcoding data of microbial communities from an additional 31 Danish stream sediments, as well as 140 macroinvertebrate indicator species. Metabarcoding of freshwater stream bulk and sediment samples has revealed strong parallels to conventional fauna observations in relation to estimations of water quality. Both the invertebrate and microbial community diversity followed the general trend of increasing to a plateau with higher water quality (data not shown). Macroinvertebrate composition (Fig. 1a) and sediment microbiome composition (Fig. 1b) were observed to be present on a gradient in relation to water quality, with individual taxa being either more, equally or less abundant with changing water quality, and only few solely related to a single category. Microbial populations associated to poor oxygenation (Methylomonadaceae, Rhodocyclaceae), as well as faecal contaminations (Anaerolineaceae, Lentimicrobiaceae) were abundantly observed in sediments of lower ecological quality. This equates to presence of macroinvertebrates able to survive in polluted environments with poor oxygen conditions. Part of the sediment microbiome was also found to be associated to the analysed macroinvertebrate species (Fig. 1c). However, the invertebrates also had their own unique and diverse microbiota, including known endosymbionts (Wolbachia, Rickettsia) and other insect associated microbiota (Acinetobacter, Chryseobacterium). Current sequencing platforms and high quality databases combined with advanced statistical analyses have made it possible to begin the development of modified assessment protocols based on DNA analyses, and could potentially lead to entirely new ecological quality indices for the prediction of water quality. Microbes can be very sensitive to environmental changes, and harbour potential indicator organisms for e.g. pollution, and by extension, water quality in a given stream. Microbiome data is abundant, and easy to obtain from all types of environmental samples, including those collected for metabarcoding of existing BQE such as macroinvertebrates. Exploring the use of sediment and fauna microbiomes has the potential to yield a wealth of new information relating to how ecosystems reflect water quality, and may provide additional indicators for use in DNA-based water quality assessment methods.


Author(s):  
Francesca Bona ◽  
Valentina La Morgia ◽  
Stefano Fenoglio ◽  
Luana Morandi ◽  
Elisa Falasco

One of the main challenges in river management is the setting of nutrient thresholds that support good ecological status, which is the main objective to achieve for the European member states. This is a complex process, which needs an accurate analysis of the data collected so far for the ecological classification of rivers belonging to different typologies. We analysed the data of the multiannual monitoring concerning diatoms and nutrients in the upper Po River (NW Italy) with the aim of exploring the response of diatom community in terms of species composition, ecological guilds and indices. We considered data of 390 samples, of which 2/3 belonging to the “Central macrotype” (i.e. lowland stretches) and 1/3 to “Alpine siliceous”. We performed a Principal Coordinate Analysis to detect community patterns with respect to water chemical classification and macrotypes highlighting species and ecological guilds characteristic of samples along a water quality gradient. We then performed a partial RDA to focus on the role of environmental and spatial factors in shaping the diatom community in each of the two macrotypes. Finally, we investigated the concordance between the Italian normative indices ICMi (for diatoms) and LIMECO (a chemical index of water quality). We found significant differences in the diatom communities of the two macrotypes and in their response to water quality and to spatial factors. Communities resulted as much more uniform in sites with a low water quality, with characteristic species such as Navicula gregaria, Nitzschia palea and Sellaphora nigri. On the other hands, moderately disturbed sites (in terms of trophic level) were characterised by the highest guild diversity. The RDA confirmed the importance of spatial factors in shaping the diatom assemblages, especially in Alpine streams where the physical barriers may condition species dispersion. The comparison between the two normative indices highlights that the correspondence in the classification is achieved in the 57% (Alpine macrotype) and 43% (Central macrotype) of samples. According to our findings, we suggest the revision of the ICMi, both class boundaries and reference value. In addition, we recommend to lower LIMECO threshold for total phosphorus: indeed, several studies have shown significant changes in the diatom community composition starting from very low values (below the current LIMECO threshold, i.e. 50 µgL-1). Moreover, the extension of our study to the whole Po River basin will complete our knowledge of species not yet included in the diatom indices and of the community response to nutrient levels also in other macrotypes.


Water ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (5) ◽  
pp. 1471
Author(s):  
In-Hwan Cho ◽  
Ha-Kyung Kim ◽  
Min-Hyuk Lee ◽  
Yong-Jae Kim ◽  
Hyuk Lee ◽  
...  

Most of Korea’s rivers and lakes are subject to physico-chemical disturbances, such as increased water quantity and flow rates, and influx of nitrogen and phosphorus, due to intense rainfall concentrated in the Asian monsoon season. To examine the influence of rainfall on epilithic diatom communities, we measured the diatom distribution and river water quality at 29 sites along the main-stream and tributaries of the Hantangang River, Korea, in the period of 2012–2015. Water quality parameters in the polluted sites had improved following rainfall, but the response of dominant species varied with water quality; the dominant species Nitzschia fonticola decreased in abundance regardless of sampling sites, and the abundance of Achnanthidium minutissimum in the clean sites and Nitzschia palea in the polluted sites increased after rainfall, respectively. The community dynamic index (CDI) showed that the most obvious shift of epilithic diatom community occurred in the mid-polluted sites in 2013 with the highest rainfall. This suggest that the effect of rainfalls on the epilithic diatom community is dependent on various parameters, such as the magnitude of rainfall, water quality and its biotic compositions of diatom communities, but it also indicates that improving the water quality of rivers is important to promote the resilience of diatom communities to extremes of precipitation. Further investigation is needed to generalize the effects of monsoon rainfall on the epilithic diatom communities, considering rivers with different environmental characteristics.


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