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RECORD NUMBER: 40 OF 47

Main Title Response of Predatory Zooplankton Populations to the Experimental Acidification of Little Rock Lake, Wisconsin.
Author Sierszen, M. E. ; Frost, T. M. ;
CORP Author Environmental Research Lab.-Duluth, MN. ;Wisconsin Univ.-Madison. Center for Limnology.;National Science Foundation, Washington, DC.
Publisher c1993
Year Published 1993
Report Number EPA/600/J-93/422;
Stock Number PB94-101730
Additional Subjects Acidification ; Zooplankton ; Little Rock Lake ; Biodeterioration ; Populations ; Monitoring ; pH ; Concentration(Composition) ; Tolerances(Physiology) ; Diptera ; Invertebrates ; Response ; Wisconsin ; Reprints ; Chaoborus ; Phantom midge ; Predation
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NTIS  PB94-101730 Some EPA libraries have a fiche copy filed under the call number shown. 07/26/2022
Collation 12p
Abstract
To assess the effects of lake acidification on large predatory zooplankton, the authors monitored population levels of four limnetic taxa for 6 years in a lake with two basins, one of which was experimentally acidified (2 years at each of three levels: pH 5.6, 5.2 and 4.7). Concentrations of phantom midge (Chaoborus spp.), the most abundant large predator, remained similar in the treatment and reference basins until the fourth year (pH 5.2) when they increased in the treatment basin. In contrast, Epischura lacustris and Leptodora kindtii disappeared from limnetic samples, and water mites declined to near zero upon acidification. Treatment basin populations of E. lacustris declined sharply during the second year of acidification. The nature of the decline suggested sensitivity of an early life stage during the first year at pH 5.6. Leptodora kindtii showed no population response at pH 5.6, but declined to essentially zero at pH 5.2. Treatment basin populations of water mites fluctuated until declining in the fifth and sixth years (pH 4.7). These changes indicate a variety of direct and indirect responses to lake acidification.