Author:
Robertson A. I.,Healey M. R.,King A. J.
Abstract
Two billabongs on the floodplain of the Murrumbidgee River, Australia, were
partitioned in half with impermeable plastic barriers and the biomass of carp
was manipulated to establish high- and low-carp biomass treatments in each
billabong. Measurements of benthic variables (rates of particle settlement,
biofilm development, sediment respiration, macrophyte detritus decomposition,
sediment solid-phase nutrient concentrations and benthic algal biomass) were
performed over four months from summer to winter 1995. Rates of particle
settlement were greater in the high-carp treatment of each billabong
throughout the experiment. High carp biomass had a negative impact on the
autotrophic component of the biofilm developing on wood blocks placed at
different heights above the sediment surface but the mechanism responsible
differed between billabongs. Sediment oxygen demand became greater in the
presence of a higher biomass of carp during the experiment but time courses
differed between billabongs. Manipulations of carp biomass did not influence
algal biomass on the sediment surface, the rate of decomposition of macrophyte
detritus or sediment solid-phase nutrients or nutrient ratios. The impact of
carp on benthic and surficial processes was significant but the mechanisms of
change differed between billabongs.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
40 articles.
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