masterThesis
Efeito de técnicas de mitigação de lagos eutrofizados sobre assembleias de macroinvertebrados bentônicos
Fecha
2019-06-25Registro en:
NAVARRO, Clara Dantas. Efeito de técnicas de mitigação de lagos eutrofizados sobre assembleias de macroinvertebrados bentônicos. 2019. 27f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Ecologia) - Centro de Biociências, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2019.
Autor
Navarro, Clara Dantas
Resumen
Coagulant application and the removal of bentivorous fish are two techniques of water
quality management of eutrophic lakes, which decrease or increase the internal phosphorus
of sediments to a water column and mitigate the effects of eutrophication. However, the
selected and combined effects of these two management techniques on the structure and
skills of aquatic communities are little used. Coagulant application increases the flow of
organic matter from the sediment water column, reduces the availability of debris to
benthic invertebrates, while the removal of bentiva fish reduces competition pressure and
/ or predation on benthic invertebrates. Therefore, increased debris availability may affect
a stronger positive effect on benthic macroinvertebrates that affect the presence of debris
bentivorous fish, and is therefore considered a synergistic effect of both techniques on
population and the same types of use. To test this hypothesis, a field experiment with a 2 x
2 factorial design was carried out, combining the application or not of the PAC with the
presence and absence of the Prochilodus brevis bentivore fish. The experiment was carried
out during 8 weeks in 20 6 m3 mesocosms inserted in a tropical semiarid lake and the 4
treatments randomly allocated in the mesocosms. Sediment samples were collected at each
mesocosm at the beginning, middle and end of the experiment. Benthic macroinvertebrates
were identified and quantified in each sample and the density data of these organisms were
used by a Kruskal-Wallis. As water quality management techniques and interaction
between them are not effects on macroinvertebrate benthic. Therefore, the results refuted
the research hypothesis and suggested that the high availability of organic matter, the
typical eutrophic environments, do not influence the assembly of macroinvertebrate
benthic plants.