Ma. Chadwick et Jw. Feminella, Influence of salinity and temperature on the growth and production of a freshwater mayfly in the Lower Mobile River, Alabama, LIMN OCEAN, 46(3), 2001, pp. 532-542
Secondary production of the burrowing mayfly, Hexagenia limbata, was quanti
fied from four sites differing in seasonal salinity within the Lower Mobile
River, Alabama, from October 1995 to September 1996. This population was u
nivoltine, with emergence occurring from late May through early August. Com
parisons with other populations of this species showed latitudinal trends s
uggesting that summer temperatures may exceed an upper thermal threshold fo
r growth. Longitudinal differences in riverine salinity (i.e., upriver site
s, 0 parts per thousand; downriver sites, 5.5 parts per thousand maximum sa
linity) explained most of the differences among sites, both for average den
sity (upriver sites, 75.6 mayflies m(-2); downriver sites, 2.54 mayflies m(
-2)) and annual production (upriver, 1,669 mg m(-2) yr(-1); downriver, 46.6
g m(-2) yr(-1)). Laboratory bioassays indicated that H. limbata nymphs cou
ld survive elevated salinity (LC50 of 6.3 parts per thousand at 18 degreesC
; 2.4 parts per thousand at 28 degreesC), although growth experiments showe
d similar growth at 0, 2, 4, and 8 parts per thousand salinity treatments.
Results from field observations and laboratory experiments demonstrated tha
t these mayflies are tolerant of increases in salinity and showed that indi
viduals surviving the stress of elevated salinity fan grow at similar rates
as mayflies in freshwater.