4.6 Article

Paleolimnological reconstruction of the trophic state in Lake Balaton (Hungary) using Cladocera remains

Journal

HYDROBIOLOGIA
Volume 676, Issue 1, Pages 237-248

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10750-011-0898-7

Keywords

Bosmina; Cladocera remains; Chydoridae; Eutrophication; Fish; Lake Balaton; Shallow lake

Funding

  1. Hungarian National Science Foundation [OTKA-T 049098]
  2. Hungarian National Research and Development Program [BALOKO 3B022/04, TAMOP 4.2.2-08/1-2008-0020, TAMOP 4.2.1/B-09/1/KONV-2010-0006]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The sediment of Lake Balaton (Hungary) provides important information about the lake's history, particularly with regard to eutrophication. In this study, we used fossil pigment analysis and subfossil Cladocera remains preserved in a dated sediment core to identify trophic stages from similar to 250 BC to present. Dates of the most recent eutrophic events are in good agreement with previously published data. In general, the abundance and diversity of the Cladocera community increased with eutrophication and decreased with oligotrophication. The sediments of Lake Balaton were characterised by Chydoridae remains, of which Alona species were the most abundant. Of these, Alona quadrangularis and Alona affinis accounted for 40 and 20% of the total Cladocera remains, respectively. The trophic state of Lake Balaton varied between mesotrophic and eutrophic regimes. Seven different trophic periods were identified in Lake Balaton on the basis of Sedimentary Pigment Degradation Unit (SPDU) content of the sediment. Eutrophic states were (1) from similar to 250 to similar to 30 BC, (3) between similar to 300 and similar to 590 AD, (5) between 1834 and 1944 and (7) from the 1960s until present. Mesotrophic states were (2) similar to 30 BC to similar to 300 AD, (4) 590-1834, (6) 1944-1960s. Discriminant analysis of the cladoceran data confirmed these historic events, except for the short mesotrophic episode between 1944 and 1960. The first stage of eutrophication of Lake Balaton (similar to 250 to similar to 30 BC) was characterised by extensive macrophyte vegetation, as indicated by the increasing abundance of vegetation-associated Cladocera species (Eurycercus lamellatus, Sida crystallina, Pleuroxus sp.). Intensification of eutrophication was identified since the 1980s, reflected by a high abundance of Bosmina species. The most significant planktivorous fish of Lake Balaton was the Sabre carp (Pelecus cultratus), and when its number decreased, the abundance of Bosmina species increased. This study shows that Cladocera are responsive to trophic state changes, underlining their importance as a tool for the assessment of lake eutrophication.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available