Contrasting pelagic plankton in temperate Irish lakes: the relative contribution of heterotrophic, mixotrophic and autotrophic components, and the effects of extreme rainfall events (Pre-published version)

Contrasting pelagic plankton in temperate Irish lakes: the relative contribution of hetero-, mixo- and autotrophic components, and the effects of extreme rainfall events The mobilisation of energy from allocthonous carbon by heterotrophic bacterioplankton can be proportionally more important than au...

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Published in:Inland Waters
Other Authors: Dalton, Catherine, Sparber, Karin, de Eyto, Elvira, Jennings, Eleanor, Lenihan, David, Cassina, Fillipo
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10395/2290
https://doi.org/10.5268/IW-5.3.828
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author2 Dalton, Catherine
Sparber, Karin
de Eyto, Elvira
Jennings, Eleanor
Lenihan, David
Cassina, Fillipo
collection Mary Immaculate College (University of Limerick): Institutional Repository and Digital Archive
container_issue 3
container_start_page 295
container_title Inland Waters
container_volume 5
description Contrasting pelagic plankton in temperate Irish lakes: the relative contribution of hetero-, mixo- and autotrophic components, and the effects of extreme rainfall events The mobilisation of energy from allocthonous carbon by heterotrophic bacterioplankton can be proportionally more important than autotrophic production in humic lakes. Moreover, increasing levels of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in many aquatic systems linked to increases in precipitation, which in turn may be related to changing climate, means that this heterotrophic component of the foodweb may play an increasing role in the overall transfer and production of energy, particularly within peatland catchments. While such catchments are very common in the temperate northwest Atlantic regions of Europe, studies describing the seasonal dynamics of the heterotrophic, mixotrophic and autotrophic components of their aquatic foodwebs are rare. In this study, the biomass of these pelagic components was enumerated over one year in two oligotrophic lakes, both situated in peatland catchments in the west of Ireland, but with contrasting DOC concentrations. Bacterial biomass dominated the pelagic foodweb of the more humic lake, Lough Feeagh, while autotrophic phytoplankton biomass was greatest in the clearwater lake, Lough Guitane. The biomass of potentially mixotrophic flagellates was also slightly larger in the Lough Guitane, while phagotrophic ciliate biomass was comparable between the two lakes. An extreme precipitation event led to a significant increase in bacterial biomass, while simultaneously depressing autotrophic production for several months in the humic lake. Extreme precipitation in the clearwater lake also depressed autotrophic production, but did not give rise to significant increases in bacterial biomass. This quantification of autotrophic, mixotrophic and heterotrophic components provides vital a first step in understanding how pelagic communities contribute to net ecosystem productivity, and thus how Irish peatland lakes may be affected ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Northwest Atlantic
genre_facet Northwest Atlantic
geographic Clearwater Lakes
Humic Lake
geographic_facet Clearwater Lakes
Humic Lake
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institution Open Polar
language English
long_lat ENVELOPE(-128.553,-128.553,54.300,54.300)
ENVELOPE(-36.500,-36.500,-54.250,-54.250)
op_collection_id ftmaryimmaculate
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.5268/IW-5.3.828
op_relation 5;3
Sparber, K., Dalton, C., de Eyto, E., Jennings, E., Lenihan, D. & Cassina, F. (2015) ‘Contrasting pelagic plankton in temperate Irish lakes: the relative contribution of hetero-, mixo- and autotrophic components, and the effects of extreme rainfall events’, Inland Waters, 5(3), 295-310, available: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.5268/IW-5.3.828.
2044-205X
http://hdl.handle.net/10395/2290
doi:10.5268/IW-5.3.828
op_rights https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.5268/IW-5.3.828
publishDate 2015
publisher Taylor & Francis
record_format openpolar
spelling ftmaryimmaculate:oai:dspace.mic.ul.ie:10395/2290 2025-01-16T23:56:59+00:00 Contrasting pelagic plankton in temperate Irish lakes: the relative contribution of heterotrophic, mixotrophic and autotrophic components, and the effects of extreme rainfall events (Pre-published version) Dalton, Catherine Sparber, Karin de Eyto, Elvira Jennings, Eleanor Lenihan, David Cassina, Fillipo 2015 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10395/2290 https://doi.org/10.5268/IW-5.3.828 eng eng Taylor & Francis 5;3 Sparber, K., Dalton, C., de Eyto, E., Jennings, E., Lenihan, D. & Cassina, F. (2015) ‘Contrasting pelagic plankton in temperate Irish lakes: the relative contribution of hetero-, mixo- and autotrophic components, and the effects of extreme rainfall events’, Inland Waters, 5(3), 295-310, available: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.5268/IW-5.3.828. 2044-205X http://hdl.handle.net/10395/2290 doi:10.5268/IW-5.3.828 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.5268/IW-5.3.828 Pelagic plankton Autotrophic Heterotrophic Mixotrophic Humic and clearwater lakes Extreme precipitation Article all_mic_research mic_published_reviewed 2015 ftmaryimmaculate https://doi.org/10.5268/IW-5.3.828 2024-05-16T09:31:09Z Contrasting pelagic plankton in temperate Irish lakes: the relative contribution of hetero-, mixo- and autotrophic components, and the effects of extreme rainfall events The mobilisation of energy from allocthonous carbon by heterotrophic bacterioplankton can be proportionally more important than autotrophic production in humic lakes. Moreover, increasing levels of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in many aquatic systems linked to increases in precipitation, which in turn may be related to changing climate, means that this heterotrophic component of the foodweb may play an increasing role in the overall transfer and production of energy, particularly within peatland catchments. While such catchments are very common in the temperate northwest Atlantic regions of Europe, studies describing the seasonal dynamics of the heterotrophic, mixotrophic and autotrophic components of their aquatic foodwebs are rare. In this study, the biomass of these pelagic components was enumerated over one year in two oligotrophic lakes, both situated in peatland catchments in the west of Ireland, but with contrasting DOC concentrations. Bacterial biomass dominated the pelagic foodweb of the more humic lake, Lough Feeagh, while autotrophic phytoplankton biomass was greatest in the clearwater lake, Lough Guitane. The biomass of potentially mixotrophic flagellates was also slightly larger in the Lough Guitane, while phagotrophic ciliate biomass was comparable between the two lakes. An extreme precipitation event led to a significant increase in bacterial biomass, while simultaneously depressing autotrophic production for several months in the humic lake. Extreme precipitation in the clearwater lake also depressed autotrophic production, but did not give rise to significant increases in bacterial biomass. This quantification of autotrophic, mixotrophic and heterotrophic components provides vital a first step in understanding how pelagic communities contribute to net ecosystem productivity, and thus how Irish peatland lakes may be affected ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Northwest Atlantic Mary Immaculate College (University of Limerick): Institutional Repository and Digital Archive Clearwater Lakes ENVELOPE(-128.553,-128.553,54.300,54.300) Humic Lake ENVELOPE(-36.500,-36.500,-54.250,-54.250) Inland Waters 5 3 295 310
spellingShingle Pelagic plankton
Autotrophic
Heterotrophic
Mixotrophic
Humic and clearwater lakes
Extreme precipitation
Contrasting pelagic plankton in temperate Irish lakes: the relative contribution of heterotrophic, mixotrophic and autotrophic components, and the effects of extreme rainfall events (Pre-published version)
title Contrasting pelagic plankton in temperate Irish lakes: the relative contribution of heterotrophic, mixotrophic and autotrophic components, and the effects of extreme rainfall events (Pre-published version)
title_full Contrasting pelagic plankton in temperate Irish lakes: the relative contribution of heterotrophic, mixotrophic and autotrophic components, and the effects of extreme rainfall events (Pre-published version)
title_fullStr Contrasting pelagic plankton in temperate Irish lakes: the relative contribution of heterotrophic, mixotrophic and autotrophic components, and the effects of extreme rainfall events (Pre-published version)
title_full_unstemmed Contrasting pelagic plankton in temperate Irish lakes: the relative contribution of heterotrophic, mixotrophic and autotrophic components, and the effects of extreme rainfall events (Pre-published version)
title_short Contrasting pelagic plankton in temperate Irish lakes: the relative contribution of heterotrophic, mixotrophic and autotrophic components, and the effects of extreme rainfall events (Pre-published version)
title_sort contrasting pelagic plankton in temperate irish lakes: the relative contribution of heterotrophic, mixotrophic and autotrophic components, and the effects of extreme rainfall events (pre-published version)
topic Pelagic plankton
Autotrophic
Heterotrophic
Mixotrophic
Humic and clearwater lakes
Extreme precipitation
topic_facet Pelagic plankton
Autotrophic
Heterotrophic
Mixotrophic
Humic and clearwater lakes
Extreme precipitation
url http://hdl.handle.net/10395/2290
https://doi.org/10.5268/IW-5.3.828