Water (Aug 2021)

Changes in Algal Plankton Composition and Physico-Chemical Variables in a Shallow Oxbow Lake

  • Majd Muwafaq Yaqoob,
  • Csaba Berta,
  • László József Szabó,
  • György Dévai,
  • Szilárd Szabó,
  • Sándor Alex Nagy,
  • István Bácsi,
  • Alexandra Simon,
  • János Nagy,
  • Imre Somlyai,
  • Éva Ács,
  • István Grigorszky

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/w13172339
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 17
p. 2339

Abstract

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In our work, we sought to answer whether we find differences among the various zones of an oxbow lake with different land uses based on physico-chemical variables and dominant algal plankton species. The two ends of the oxbow lake are bordered by settlements, and near them there are open water areas where fishing is the major utilization form. Between the two open water areas we find a protected area with a large aquatic plant coverage and two transition zones towards the open water areas. The oxbow lake receives periodic water replenishment only at one end from one of the open water areas. During summer—due to the lack of rain—the water of the oxbow lake is used for irrigation in the surrounding arable land, so the water level fluctuation can be significant in the riverbed. Our study was performed within a vegetation period of spring, early summer, mid-summer, and fall. In connection with the ecological classification of a smaller water body, studies on the physical and chemical properties of the water and the composition of the algal plankton are usually carried out in few places and relatively infrequently. The characteristics of a water body are also influenced by seasonal changes, which can be the changes in the extent of vegetation coverage, the way land is used and the possibility of water replenishment, to which the algal community usually responds with changes. Based on our study, it can be said that even in a relatively small water body, we found a large differences based on the chemical and physical properties of the water and the characteristic algal species. Open water zones, areas with large macrovegetation coverage, and the transition zones were separated from each other.

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