Effect of Impoundment and River Diversion on Profundal Macrobenthos of Southern Indian Lake Manitoba

Profundal macrobenthos in Southern Indian Lake, Manitoba, were surveyed to determine effects of hydroelectric manipulations in 1972 (preimpoundment), 1977 (postimpoundment), and 1979 (postdiversion). Lakewide average standing crops increased following impoundment and decreased by 3 yr after impoundm...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
Main Authors: Wiens, Allen P., Rosenberg, David M.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Canadian Science Publishing 1984
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/f84-075
http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/pdf/10.1139/f84-075
Description
Summary:Profundal macrobenthos in Southern Indian Lake, Manitoba, were surveyed to determine effects of hydroelectric manipulations in 1972 (preimpoundment), 1977 (postimpoundment), and 1979 (postdiversion). Lakewide average standing crops increased following impoundment and decreased by 3 yr after impoundment. Regional changes in standing crops usually could be related to additions of nutrients leached from flooded vegetation, additions of particulate organic matter resulting from shoreline erosion, and changes in integral primary production and suspended solids concentrations before and after impoundment. Greater increases in standing crops of macrobenthos in shallower compared with deeper depth zones of the lake after flooding were attributed to preferential deposition of organic materials in the shallow areas of the lake. Mean standing crops of macrobenthos were higher in regions through which the Churchill River flowed than in regions isolated from the flow before and after impoundment. After diversion, greatest decreases in standing crops occurred in isolated regions, whereas those of regions in the flow declined much less or increased. Responses of the most abundant taxa of macrobenthos (Pontoporeia brevicornis grp., Chironomidae, Oligochaeta, Sphaeriidae) differed in many ways from those recorded for other new reservoirs. Pontoporeia brevicornis grp. remained the most abundant benthic organism, there was no evident succession of macrobenthic taxa, and a high diversity of profundal species was maintained. These results, together with the slight changes in standing crop observed after flooding, indicated only a marginal impact on macrobenthos caused by the low-level flooding of Southern Indian Lake.