A long-term study on zooplankton in two contrasting cascade reservoirs (Iguaçu River, Brazil): effects of inter-annual, seasonal, and environmental factors

Background In reservoirs, zooplankton strongly interact with the physical and chemical characteristics of water, and this interaction is mainly influenced by climate variation and the different methods used to manage the dam water level. Therefore, the aim of this study was to evaluate how the disti...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pablo H.S. Picapedra, Cleomar Fernandes, Juliana Taborda, Gilmar Baumgartner, Paulo V. Sanches
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2020-05-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/8979.pdf
id doaj-1ae9bf7a14af48c5b40594338b28fff8
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1ae9bf7a14af48c5b40594338b28fff82020-11-25T02:58:12ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592020-05-018e897910.7717/peerj.8979A long-term study on zooplankton in two contrasting cascade reservoirs (Iguaçu River, Brazil): effects of inter-annual, seasonal, and environmental factorsPablo H.S. Picapedra0Cleomar Fernandes1Juliana Taborda2Gilmar Baumgartner3Paulo V. Sanches4Programa de Pós-Graduação em Recursos Pesqueiros e Engenharia de Pesca, Universidade Estadual do Oeste do Paraná, Toledo, Paraná, BrazilGrupo de Pesquisas em Recursos Pesqueiros e Limnologia/Instituto Neotropical de Pesquisas Ambientais, Toledo, Paraná, BrazilPrograma de Pós-Graduação em Recursos Pesqueiros e Engenharia de Pesca, Universidade Estadual do Oeste do Paraná, Toledo, Paraná, BrazilPrograma de Pós-Graduação em Recursos Pesqueiros e Engenharia de Pesca, Universidade Estadual do Oeste do Paraná, Toledo, Paraná, BrazilPrograma de Pós-Graduação em Recursos Pesqueiros e Engenharia de Pesca, Universidade Estadual do Oeste do Paraná, Toledo, Paraná, BrazilBackground In reservoirs, zooplankton strongly interact with the physical and chemical characteristics of water, and this interaction is mainly influenced by climate variation and the different methods used to manage the dam water level. Therefore, the aim of this study was to evaluate how the distinct operating modes of two cascade reservoirs affected the richness, abundance, and composition of zooplankton, both spatially (intra and inter-reservoirs) and temporally (annual and seasonal). In this study, the upstream reservoir (Salto Santiago) operates using the storage method, with a water retention time (WRT) of 51 days, whereas the downstream reservoir (Salto Osório) operates using the run-of-river method, with a WRT of 16 days. Methods Zooplankton samples were collected for 16 consecutive years from the two reservoirs located on the Iguaçu River, Brazil. A total of 720 samples were collected. Four-way ANOVAs were used to determine the differences in richness and abundance of the zooplankton among years, periods, reservoirs, and environments. Multidimensional non-metric scaling (NMDS) and an analysis of similarities (ANOSIM) were used to describe similarity patterns in species composition. Finally, a canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) was used to select the environmental predictors that best explained the variation in zooplankton abundance data. Results We identified a total of 115 taxa in this study, and rotifers were the richest group. In contrast, the copepods were the most abundant. The four-way ANOVA results showed significant differences in the species richness and abundance of the zooplankton among years, periods, reservoirs, and environments. The NMDS ordination and ANOSIM test indicated that the largest differences in zooplankton species composition were annual and seasonal differences. Finally, the CCA showed that these differences were mainly associated with changes in water transparency, temperature, and the chlorophyll a, phosphorus, and total dissolved solids concentrations. Discussion Inter-annual changes in zooplankton species composition showed that over time, large filters-feeders (e.g., large daphinids and calanoid copepods) were replaced by small cladocerans (e.g., bosminids) and generalist rotifers. The highest species richness was associated with the fluvial environment, whereas the highest abundance was associated with the transitional and lacustrine reservoir environments. Variations in water temperature, nutrients, and food availability explained the annual and seasonal changes in community structure, whereas variations in the water flow characteristics of the environments explained the longitudinal changes in the richness and abundance of zooplankton in reservoirs. The differences in zooplankton structure between the two reservoirs can be explained by the functional differences between the two systems, such as their WRTs and morphometrics.https://peerj.com/articles/8979.pdfCladoceransCopepodsDam constructionNutrients contentPlankton dynamicsReservoir cascade
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pablo H.S. Picapedra
Cleomar Fernandes
Juliana Taborda
Gilmar Baumgartner
Paulo V. Sanches
spellingShingle Pablo H.S. Picapedra
Cleomar Fernandes
Juliana Taborda
Gilmar Baumgartner
Paulo V. Sanches
A long-term study on zooplankton in two contrasting cascade reservoirs (Iguaçu River, Brazil): effects of inter-annual, seasonal, and environmental factors
PeerJ
Cladocerans
Copepods
Dam construction
Nutrients content
Plankton dynamics
Reservoir cascade
author_facet Pablo H.S. Picapedra
Cleomar Fernandes
Juliana Taborda
Gilmar Baumgartner
Paulo V. Sanches
author_sort Pablo H.S. Picapedra
title A long-term study on zooplankton in two contrasting cascade reservoirs (Iguaçu River, Brazil): effects of inter-annual, seasonal, and environmental factors
title_short A long-term study on zooplankton in two contrasting cascade reservoirs (Iguaçu River, Brazil): effects of inter-annual, seasonal, and environmental factors
title_full A long-term study on zooplankton in two contrasting cascade reservoirs (Iguaçu River, Brazil): effects of inter-annual, seasonal, and environmental factors
title_fullStr A long-term study on zooplankton in two contrasting cascade reservoirs (Iguaçu River, Brazil): effects of inter-annual, seasonal, and environmental factors
title_full_unstemmed A long-term study on zooplankton in two contrasting cascade reservoirs (Iguaçu River, Brazil): effects of inter-annual, seasonal, and environmental factors
title_sort long-term study on zooplankton in two contrasting cascade reservoirs (iguaçu river, brazil): effects of inter-annual, seasonal, and environmental factors
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Background In reservoirs, zooplankton strongly interact with the physical and chemical characteristics of water, and this interaction is mainly influenced by climate variation and the different methods used to manage the dam water level. Therefore, the aim of this study was to evaluate how the distinct operating modes of two cascade reservoirs affected the richness, abundance, and composition of zooplankton, both spatially (intra and inter-reservoirs) and temporally (annual and seasonal). In this study, the upstream reservoir (Salto Santiago) operates using the storage method, with a water retention time (WRT) of 51 days, whereas the downstream reservoir (Salto Osório) operates using the run-of-river method, with a WRT of 16 days. Methods Zooplankton samples were collected for 16 consecutive years from the two reservoirs located on the Iguaçu River, Brazil. A total of 720 samples were collected. Four-way ANOVAs were used to determine the differences in richness and abundance of the zooplankton among years, periods, reservoirs, and environments. Multidimensional non-metric scaling (NMDS) and an analysis of similarities (ANOSIM) were used to describe similarity patterns in species composition. Finally, a canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) was used to select the environmental predictors that best explained the variation in zooplankton abundance data. Results We identified a total of 115 taxa in this study, and rotifers were the richest group. In contrast, the copepods were the most abundant. The four-way ANOVA results showed significant differences in the species richness and abundance of the zooplankton among years, periods, reservoirs, and environments. The NMDS ordination and ANOSIM test indicated that the largest differences in zooplankton species composition were annual and seasonal differences. Finally, the CCA showed that these differences were mainly associated with changes in water transparency, temperature, and the chlorophyll a, phosphorus, and total dissolved solids concentrations. Discussion Inter-annual changes in zooplankton species composition showed that over time, large filters-feeders (e.g., large daphinids and calanoid copepods) were replaced by small cladocerans (e.g., bosminids) and generalist rotifers. The highest species richness was associated with the fluvial environment, whereas the highest abundance was associated with the transitional and lacustrine reservoir environments. Variations in water temperature, nutrients, and food availability explained the annual and seasonal changes in community structure, whereas variations in the water flow characteristics of the environments explained the longitudinal changes in the richness and abundance of zooplankton in reservoirs. The differences in zooplankton structure between the two reservoirs can be explained by the functional differences between the two systems, such as their WRTs and morphometrics.
topic Cladocerans
Copepods
Dam construction
Nutrients content
Plankton dynamics
Reservoir cascade
url https://peerj.com/articles/8979.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT pablohspicapedra alongtermstudyonzooplanktonintwocontrastingcascadereservoirsiguacuriverbrazileffectsofinterannualseasonalandenvironmentalfactors
AT cleomarfernandes alongtermstudyonzooplanktonintwocontrastingcascadereservoirsiguacuriverbrazileffectsofinterannualseasonalandenvironmentalfactors
AT julianataborda alongtermstudyonzooplanktonintwocontrastingcascadereservoirsiguacuriverbrazileffectsofinterannualseasonalandenvironmentalfactors
AT gilmarbaumgartner alongtermstudyonzooplanktonintwocontrastingcascadereservoirsiguacuriverbrazileffectsofinterannualseasonalandenvironmentalfactors
AT paulovsanches alongtermstudyonzooplanktonintwocontrastingcascadereservoirsiguacuriverbrazileffectsofinterannualseasonalandenvironmentalfactors
AT pablohspicapedra longtermstudyonzooplanktonintwocontrastingcascadereservoirsiguacuriverbrazileffectsofinterannualseasonalandenvironmentalfactors
AT cleomarfernandes longtermstudyonzooplanktonintwocontrastingcascadereservoirsiguacuriverbrazileffectsofinterannualseasonalandenvironmentalfactors
AT julianataborda longtermstudyonzooplanktonintwocontrastingcascadereservoirsiguacuriverbrazileffectsofinterannualseasonalandenvironmentalfactors
AT gilmarbaumgartner longtermstudyonzooplanktonintwocontrastingcascadereservoirsiguacuriverbrazileffectsofinterannualseasonalandenvironmentalfactors
AT paulovsanches longtermstudyonzooplanktonintwocontrastingcascadereservoirsiguacuriverbrazileffectsofinterannualseasonalandenvironmentalfactors
_version_ 1724707919266578432