Crustacean Zooplankton Species Richness in 66 North American Lakes

Data from 66 North American lakes were collected to construct a model for predicting the number of crustacean zooplankton species expected in a lake. The chosen lakes have a range from 4 sq m to 80 x 10**9 sq m surface area, range from ultra-oligotrophic to hypereutrophic, and have zooplankton speci...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: North Temperate Lakes LTERCenter for Limnology680 N Park StMadisonWI53706-1492USA608-262-2573608-265-2340infomgr@lter.limnology.wisc.edu 2011
Subjects:
Ela
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10255/dryad.13805
http://metacat.lternet.edu/knb/metacat/knb-lter-ntl.223.6/xml
Description
Summary:Data from 66 North American lakes were collected to construct a model for predicting the number of crustacean zooplankton species expected in a lake. The chosen lakes have a range from 4 sq m to 80 x 10**9 sq m surface area, range from ultra-oligotrophic to hypereutrophic, and have zooplankton species lists based of several years of observation The number of crustacean zooplankton species in a lake is significantly correlated with lake size, average rate of photosynthesis (parabolic function) and the number of lakes within 20 km. A multiple linear regression model, using these three independent variables, explains approximately 75% of the variation in log species richness. Prediction of species richness is not enhanced by the knowledge of lake depth, salinity, elevation, latitude, longitude, or distance to nearest lake. The North American species area curve is statistically different from and steeper than the corresponding European curve.Dodson, S. 1992. Predicting Crustacean Zooplankton Species Richness. Limnology and Oceanography 37:848-856.http://lter.limnology.wisc.edu/dodson/NA92-SID.DOC - Supplementary Material - Data base and literature for Dodson, S. 1992. Number of sites: 69