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Classification and ordination of profundal macroinvertebrate communities in nutrient poor, oligo‐mesohumic lakes in relation to environmental data
Author(s) -
JOHNSON RICHARD K.,
WIEDERHOLM TORGNY
Publication year - 1989
Publication title -
freshwater biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.297
H-Index - 156
eISSN - 1365-2427
pISSN - 0046-5070
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2427.1989.tb01370.x
Subject(s) - profundal zone , ordination , phytoplankton , ecology , canonical correspondence analysis , environmental science , multivariate statistics , indicator value , nutrient , biology , littoral zone , mathematics , species richness , statistics
SUMMARY. 1. Profundal macroinvertebrates and water chemistry of sixty‐eight nutrient poor, poorly buffered lakes were sampled in 1983 or 1986. Assemblages of profundal zoobenthos were classified using two‐way indicator species analysis (TWINSPAN), ordinated by canonical correspondence analysis (CCA), and related to physico‐chemical factors using CCA. discriminant analysis, and regression. 2. 90% of zoobenthos (TWINSPAN) groups were classified correctly using discriminant analysis. Depth (Function 1), soluble reactive Si(OH) 4 and HCO 3 , ‐(2), and phytoplankton biovolume and pH (3) were the strongest correlates with the three discriminant functions. 3. Regression analysis showed that depth, KmnO 4 , consumption, and phytoplankton biovolume were the best estimators of zoobenthos biomass in the profundal. 4. Multivariate analyses showed species assemblages amongst the profundal zoobenthos to be good indicators of lake type, particularly depth, pH, and phytoplankton biovolume.

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