Diversity of Diatom Algae in the Lena Delta Nature Reserve and the Adjacent Territory in the Specific Ecological Factors of the Arctic

A total of 413 diatom taxa were known for aquatic habitats of the Lena Delta Nature Reserve. We identified 385 taxa in 14 small tundra lakes near the reserve that significantly enriched the diatom diversity of the region (666 taxa including definitions to the genus level). Thus, the species composit...

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Published in:Diversity
Main Authors: Sophia Barinova, Viktor Gabyshev, Sergey Genkal
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/d15070802
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/1424-2818/15/7/802/ 2023-08-20T04:04:19+02:00 Diversity of Diatom Algae in the Lena Delta Nature Reserve and the Adjacent Territory in the Specific Ecological Factors of the Arctic Sophia Barinova Viktor Gabyshev Sergey Genkal agris 2023-06-23 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/d15070802 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/d15070802 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Diversity; Volume 15; Issue 7; Pages: 802 diatoms diversity ecology floristic comparative floristics climate Red List threatened species bioindicators statistical mapping Text 2023 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/d15070802 2023-08-01T10:35:33Z A total of 413 diatom taxa were known for aquatic habitats of the Lena Delta Nature Reserve. We identified 385 taxa in 14 small tundra lakes near the reserve that significantly enriched the diatom diversity of the region (666 taxa including definitions to the genus level). Thus, the species composition of diatoms in the reserve and adjacent territories was increased by 278 species. We showed that the species of the genera Pinnularia (57) and Eunotia (51) have predominance at the family and generic levels. The index of intraspecific variability Ssp./Sp. for the lakes of the reserve was 1.11, and that for the lakes of the Tiksi region 1.14, which is typical for high-latitude and high-mountain communities. The number of rare or endangered species varied in different lakes from 1 to 10, totaling 42 species for the entire study area. Bioindication has shown that potentially threatened species prefer moderate temperatures, and slightly acidic or neutral environments free from organic pollution. A comparative analysis of the species composition of diatoms in the vicinity of the Lena Delta and other northern water bodies of Yakutia and the Arctic Islands showed that the species composition of each lake in the Arctic has a discernably different species distribution. The indicator characteristics show a certain response of the species composition of diatoms to changes in salinity, pH, and organic pollution. Regularities in the spatial distribution of diatoms in the study area were revealed in connection with the environmental variables of their habitat. Statistical mapping of diatom diversity data and bioindicators revealed a pronounced response to point pollution, and also let us assume the influence of summer northeast winds on species composition of the studied lake communities. We suggest that the high diversity inherent in the diatom lakes of the Tiksi coastal zone, which can even be updated in further studies, can be considered as a property of coastal biota inherent in ecotones. Since it is in the coastal Tiksi ... Text Arctic lena delta Tiksi Tundra Yakutia MDPI Open Access Publishing Arctic Tiksi ENVELOPE(128.867,128.867,71.633,71.633) Diversity 15 7 802
institution Open Polar
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
op_collection_id ftmdpi
language English
topic diatoms
diversity
ecology
floristic
comparative floristics
climate
Red List
threatened species
bioindicators
statistical mapping
spellingShingle diatoms
diversity
ecology
floristic
comparative floristics
climate
Red List
threatened species
bioindicators
statistical mapping
Sophia Barinova
Viktor Gabyshev
Sergey Genkal
Diversity of Diatom Algae in the Lena Delta Nature Reserve and the Adjacent Territory in the Specific Ecological Factors of the Arctic
topic_facet diatoms
diversity
ecology
floristic
comparative floristics
climate
Red List
threatened species
bioindicators
statistical mapping
description A total of 413 diatom taxa were known for aquatic habitats of the Lena Delta Nature Reserve. We identified 385 taxa in 14 small tundra lakes near the reserve that significantly enriched the diatom diversity of the region (666 taxa including definitions to the genus level). Thus, the species composition of diatoms in the reserve and adjacent territories was increased by 278 species. We showed that the species of the genera Pinnularia (57) and Eunotia (51) have predominance at the family and generic levels. The index of intraspecific variability Ssp./Sp. for the lakes of the reserve was 1.11, and that for the lakes of the Tiksi region 1.14, which is typical for high-latitude and high-mountain communities. The number of rare or endangered species varied in different lakes from 1 to 10, totaling 42 species for the entire study area. Bioindication has shown that potentially threatened species prefer moderate temperatures, and slightly acidic or neutral environments free from organic pollution. A comparative analysis of the species composition of diatoms in the vicinity of the Lena Delta and other northern water bodies of Yakutia and the Arctic Islands showed that the species composition of each lake in the Arctic has a discernably different species distribution. The indicator characteristics show a certain response of the species composition of diatoms to changes in salinity, pH, and organic pollution. Regularities in the spatial distribution of diatoms in the study area were revealed in connection with the environmental variables of their habitat. Statistical mapping of diatom diversity data and bioindicators revealed a pronounced response to point pollution, and also let us assume the influence of summer northeast winds on species composition of the studied lake communities. We suggest that the high diversity inherent in the diatom lakes of the Tiksi coastal zone, which can even be updated in further studies, can be considered as a property of coastal biota inherent in ecotones. Since it is in the coastal Tiksi ...
format Text
author Sophia Barinova
Viktor Gabyshev
Sergey Genkal
author_facet Sophia Barinova
Viktor Gabyshev
Sergey Genkal
author_sort Sophia Barinova
title Diversity of Diatom Algae in the Lena Delta Nature Reserve and the Adjacent Territory in the Specific Ecological Factors of the Arctic
title_short Diversity of Diatom Algae in the Lena Delta Nature Reserve and the Adjacent Territory in the Specific Ecological Factors of the Arctic
title_full Diversity of Diatom Algae in the Lena Delta Nature Reserve and the Adjacent Territory in the Specific Ecological Factors of the Arctic
title_fullStr Diversity of Diatom Algae in the Lena Delta Nature Reserve and the Adjacent Territory in the Specific Ecological Factors of the Arctic
title_full_unstemmed Diversity of Diatom Algae in the Lena Delta Nature Reserve and the Adjacent Territory in the Specific Ecological Factors of the Arctic
title_sort diversity of diatom algae in the lena delta nature reserve and the adjacent territory in the specific ecological factors of the arctic
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2023
url https://doi.org/10.3390/d15070802
op_coverage agris
long_lat ENVELOPE(128.867,128.867,71.633,71.633)
geographic Arctic
Tiksi
geographic_facet Arctic
Tiksi
genre Arctic
lena delta
Tiksi
Tundra
Yakutia
genre_facet Arctic
lena delta
Tiksi
Tundra
Yakutia
op_source Diversity; Volume 15; Issue 7; Pages: 802
op_relation https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/d15070802
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3390/d15070802
container_title Diversity
container_volume 15
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