THE PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY OF BENTHIC AND PLANKTONIC ALGAE IN A PRAIRIEWETLAND UNDER CONTROLLED WATER-LEVEL REGIMES

Citation
Ggc. Robinson et al., THE PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY OF BENTHIC AND PLANKTONIC ALGAE IN A PRAIRIEWETLAND UNDER CONTROLLED WATER-LEVEL REGIMES, Wetlands, 17(2), 1997, pp. 182-194
Citations number
55
Categorie Soggetti
Environmental Sciences",Ecology
Journal title
ISSN journal
02775212
Volume
17
Issue
2
Year of publication
1997
Pages
182 - 194
Database
ISI
SICI code
0277-5212(1997)17:2<182:TPPOBA>2.0.ZU;2-3
Abstract
There have been few measurements of primary productivity by benthic (p eriphytic) and planktonic algae in prairie wetlands so their quantitat ive importance relative to other primary producers is largely unknown, We measured the daily productivity (inorganic carbon assimilation per m(2) of wetland area) of phytoplankton, epipelon, epiphyton, and meta phyton in ten wetland cells in Delta Marsh, Manitoba over a five-year period, Water levels in the cells were manipulated so that some cells had normal water levels for the wetland, while water depths increased 30 cm or 60 cm in other treatments. With increasing water depth, phyto plankton productivity increased while that of epipelon, epiphyton, and metaphyton decreased. Metaphyton was the largest contributor to total algal productivity (70%), followed by epiphyton (23%), phytoplankton (6%), and epipelon (1%). Phytoplankton had the highest photosynthetic efficiency (C assimilated per unit chlorophyll), despite being a minor contributor to Coral productivity. Variations in P-I parameters (alph a, beta, I-k, and P-max) were considerable, possibly due to temporal a nd spatial fluctuation in the abiotic environment. Algal productivity was comparable to that of submersed and emergent macrophytes, suggesti ng that algae are probably important resources in supporting food webs in prairie wetlands.