4.6 Article

Ciliate communities in shallow groundwater: seasonal and spatial characteristics

Journal

FRESHWATER BIOLOGY
Volume 52, Issue 9, Pages 1745-1761

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2427.2007.01806.x

Keywords

ciliate community structure; dissolved oxygen; sediment depth; shallow groundwater; temperature

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1. Ciliated protozoans (Phylum Ciliophora) were collected from five sites in a shallow groundwater system in southern Ontario, Canada over a 13-month period: one at the spring source, two along the channel banks, and two in the stream channel. Ciliates and environmental data were collected from surface water and at five depths into the sediment, located at 20, 40, 60, 80 and 100 cm. 2. Species richness was high (170 ciliate species belonging to 89 genera were identified) and variable, both spatially and temporally. Highest species richness (86) occurred between 20 and 60 cm, and typically decreased below 60 cm. 3. Ciliate densities were also seasonally and spatially variable. Densities peaked in March between 40 cm (as high as 69 900 cells L-1) and 60 cm, and again in May and June at 80 and 100 cm. Densities were lowest in winter. The surface-water ciliate community had a different species composition and lower population densities. 4. At all depths, small (< 50 mu m) bacterivorous ciliates typically dominated, but omnivorous and predatory species were also present (combined, up to 30% of the average density). 5. Several ciliate genera, traditionally considered planktonic, occurred at low densities from 40 cm down to 100 cm. 6. Ordination analysis indicated that the main factors influencing the shallow groundwater ciliate communities were depth and temperature. 7. Dissolved oxygen also appeared to influence these communities in that they typically comprised genera that preferred either low-oxygen or anaerobic conditions.

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