Water flow and temperature as main factors that regulate phytoplankton and cyanobacterial blooms in a large subtropical river = El caudal y la temperatura del agua son los principales factores que regulan el fitoplancton y las floraciones de cianobacterias en un gran río subtropical

FERRARI, GRACIELA

Resumen:

Seasonal variations and interannual changes (2006-2019) of the phytoplankton community, related to variations in water quality and river discharge, in the lower part of the Uruguay River in South America are presented. In total, 422 microalgae and cyanobacterial taxa were identified. Cryptophytes, cyanobacteria, and diatoms were the predominant groups. Although nanoflagellates and cryptophytes were always present in plankton, statistical differences were found in seasonal assemblages of phytoplankton. According to the similarity analysis SIMPER, the typical species for each season were identified: Aulacoseira spp. in winter, Dolichospermum uruguayense, Durinskia baltica and Ankistrodesmus arcuatus in spring, Microcystis aeruginosa, M. wesenbergii, Dolichospermum uruguayense and D.circinale in summer and Ceratium cf. furcoides, A. arcuatus, Raphidiopsis and Jaaginema sp. in autumn. Under lentic river conditions (<2000 m3 s-1) and above 22 ºC, high biomass was recorded due to the blooms of Microcystis and Dolichospermum. In 2010, M.panniformis reached 10.4 μg l-1microcystin-LR. Raphidiopsis mediterraneaand R. raciborskii began to be registered in spring (2009 and 2014 respectively) reaching 1041 cell ml-1 in spring 2017. This paper shows that flow, transparency and temperature are the main factors that regulate phytoplankton biomass and cyanobacterial blooms in the Uruguay River. In the summer, when the Uruguay River is in low flow conditions, cyanobacteria remain in the river. When flow increases, cyanobacteria are transported downstream and could reach the estuary of the Rio de la Plata, impacting its beaches.


Detalles Bibliográficos
2020
ALGAS
CIANOBACTERIAS
RÍO DE LA PLATA
RÍOS
TEMPERATURA
Inglés
Laboratorio Tecnológico del Uruguay
Catálogo digital del LATU
https://catalogo.latu.org.uy/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=32313
Acceso abierto
CC BY-NC
Resumen:
Sumario:Seasonal variations and interannual changes (2006-2019) of the phytoplankton community, related to variations in water quality and river discharge, in the lower part of the Uruguay River in South America are presented. In total, 422 microalgae and cyanobacterial taxa were identified. Cryptophytes, cyanobacteria, and diatoms were the predominant groups. Although nanoflagellates and cryptophytes were always present in plankton, statistical differences were found in seasonal assemblages of phytoplankton. According to the similarity analysis SIMPER, the typical species for each season were identified: Aulacoseira spp. in winter, Dolichospermum uruguayense, Durinskia baltica and Ankistrodesmus arcuatus in spring, Microcystis aeruginosa, M. wesenbergii, Dolichospermum uruguayense and D.circinale in summer and Ceratium cf. furcoides, A. arcuatus, Raphidiopsis and Jaaginema sp. in autumn. Under lentic river conditions (<2000 m3 s-1) and above 22 ºC, high biomass was recorded due to the blooms of Microcystis and Dolichospermum. In 2010, M.panniformis reached 10.4 &#956;g l-1microcystin-LR. Raphidiopsis mediterraneaand R. raciborskii began to be registered in spring (2009 and 2014 respectively) reaching 1041 cell ml-1 in spring 2017. This paper shows that flow, transparency and temperature are the main factors that regulate phytoplankton biomass and cyanobacterial blooms in the Uruguay River. In the summer, when the Uruguay River is in low flow conditions, cyanobacteria remain in the river. When flow increases, cyanobacteria are transported downstream and could reach the estuary of the Rio de la Plata, impacting its beaches.