Literature DB >> 30048875

Benthos-drift relationships as proxies for the detection of the most suitable bioindicator taxa in flowing waters - a pilot-study within a Mediterranean karst river.

Mirela Sertić Perić1, Renata Matoničkin Kepčija2, Marko Miliša3, Sanja Gottstein4, Jasna Lajtner5, Zrinka Dragun6, Vlatka Filipović Marijić7, Nesrete Krasnići8, Dušica Ivanković9, Marijana Erk10.   

Abstract

Mediterranean karst aquifers are sensitive systems vulnerable to contamination, exhibiting high rates of diversity and endemicity. In the present pilot-study, we aimed to detect the most suitable bioindicators of contaminant accumulation and mobilization within a Mediterranean karst river (Krka River, Croatia), whose lowermost sections belong to a designated protection area (national park). To meet our goal, we sampled water, drift and benthos (macroinvertebrates and periphytic microfauna) at the two Krka River sites, located upstream and downstream from town Knin and its urban influences. We compared: 1) environmental conditions (water physico-chemical parameters, trace- and macro-element concentrations); 2) abundance and diversity of periphyton and macroinvertebrate taxa constituting benthos; and 3) macroinvertebrate benthos-drift relationships between the two sites. Despite higher values of all measured physico-chemical parameters, and most trace- and macro-element concentrations at the urban-influenced site, the concentrations of contamination indicators (i.e., COD, nutrients, metals) at both sites were generally low. This is likely a result of specific "self-purification ability" of the Krka River, mediated by relatively high contaminant retention potential of the underlying tufa (i.e., calcareous) and/or macrophyte substrates. Between-site differences in water quality further affected the spatial variation of macrozoobenthos, drift, and periphytic microfauna. We suggest that increased COD and orthophosphate concentration, and macrophyte presence at the urban-influenced site, supported higher densities and diversity of benthic organisms dominated by eurivalent (i.e., contamination-tolerant) taxa. The most numerous macroinvertebrate taxa in benthos were amphipod Gammarus balcanicus and the representatives of the endemic Dinaric karst taxa - gastropods Emmericia patula and Radomaniola curta germari, and another amphipod Echinogammarus acarinatus. Although we expected to observe significantly increased drift at the urban-influenced site due to the degraded environmental conditions, it was not observed. The observed benthos-drift patterns suggest that freshwater amphipods (i.e., gammarids), which were found most numerous in drift, could be considered as the most suitable bioindicators of a contaminant (i.e., metal) accumulation and mobilization within karst aquifers comparable to Krka River.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Keywords:  Amphipoda; Contaminant pathway; Metal contamination; Physico-chemical parameters; Protected landscape; Urban influence

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30048875     DOI: 10.1016/j.ecoenv.2018.07.068

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecotoxicol Environ Saf        ISSN: 0147-6513            Impact factor:   6.291


  1 in total

1.  The Impact of Hydromorphological Alterations on Mayfly Assemblages of a Mid-Sized Lowland River in South-Eastern Europe.

Authors:  Marina Vilenica; Iva Vidaković Maoduš; Zlatko Mihaljević
Journal:  Insects       Date:  2022-05-06       Impact factor: 3.139

  1 in total

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