First limnological records of highly threatened tropical high-mountain crater lakes in Ethiopia

Lakes Dendi, Wonchi and Ziqualla are among the few remnants of undisturbed crater lakes in the central highlands of Ethiopia, and have never been investigated reliably owing to seclusion and inaccessibility. As the lakes offer a pristine environment in a beautiful landscape and are located in the vi...

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Main Authors: Degefu, Fasil, Herzig, Alois, Jirsa, Franz, Schagerl, Michael
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Tropical Conservation Science 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10210/13131
http://ujcontent.uj.ac.za8080/10210/388642
id ftunivjohannesbu:uj:5445
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivjohannesbu:uj:5445 2023-05-15T18:49:45+02:00 First limnological records of highly threatened tropical high-mountain crater lakes in Ethiopia Degefu, Fasil Herzig, Alois Jirsa, Franz Schagerl, Michael 2014 http://hdl.handle.net/10210/13131 http://ujcontent.uj.ac.za8080/10210/388642 unknown Tropical Conservation Science http://ujcontent.uj.ac.za8080/10210/388642 uj:5445 ISSN 1940-0829 http://hdl.handle.net/10210/13131 © 2014, Fasil Degefu, Alois Herzig, Franz Jirsa and Michael Schagerl Crater lakes - Ethiopia Phytoplankton Zooplankton Lake Dendi (Ethiopia) Lake Wonchi (Ethiopia) Lake Ziqualla (Ethiopia) Article 2014 ftunivjohannesbu 2020-07-21T06:03:17Z Lakes Dendi, Wonchi and Ziqualla are among the few remnants of undisturbed crater lakes in the central highlands of Ethiopia, and have never been investigated reliably owing to seclusion and inaccessibility. As the lakes offer a pristine environment in a beautiful landscape and are located in the vicinity of the capital city Addis Ababa, they are highly threatened by unsustainable tourism, shoreline and crater rim modifications, water abstraction and land grabbing. We provide a first limnological description to establish baseline data against which future environmental and biological changes can be monitored. The lakes are located above 2,800 m elevation with no surface outflow and generally show low concentrations of ions, displaying an equal distribution of readily soluble components like Na or K throughout the water column, but distinct oxygen depletion in greater depths linked to rising concentrations of Fe and Mn, which indicates subterranean springs. Based on nutrients, chlorophyll a, and water transparency, lakes Dendi and Wonchi are classified as oligotrophic and Ziqualla as oligo-mesotrophic. The phytoplankton community is dominated by coccal green algae, desmids and dinoflagellates in lakes Dendi and Wonchi, typical for unpolluted dilute waterbodies; whereas chlorococcales, in particular Botryococcus braunii and benthic diatoms, prevail in Ziqualla. The zooplankton fauna is depauperate, comprising a total of 11 rotifer taxa and 13 crustaceans. Copepods were the most abundant group and contributed over 60% to the total zooplankton abundance in all three lakes, followed by rotifers and cladocerans. The conservation significance of these lakes lies predominantly in their representation of dilute, nutrient–poor highland lake systems that support diverse biota assemblages like desmids and daphnids, which are highly sensitive to eutrophication. Article in Journal/Newspaper Copepods Rotifer The University of Johannesburg: UJContent
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Johannesburg: UJContent
op_collection_id ftunivjohannesbu
language unknown
topic Crater lakes - Ethiopia
Phytoplankton
Zooplankton
Lake Dendi (Ethiopia)
Lake Wonchi (Ethiopia)
Lake Ziqualla (Ethiopia)
spellingShingle Crater lakes - Ethiopia
Phytoplankton
Zooplankton
Lake Dendi (Ethiopia)
Lake Wonchi (Ethiopia)
Lake Ziqualla (Ethiopia)
Degefu, Fasil
Herzig, Alois
Jirsa, Franz
Schagerl, Michael
First limnological records of highly threatened tropical high-mountain crater lakes in Ethiopia
topic_facet Crater lakes - Ethiopia
Phytoplankton
Zooplankton
Lake Dendi (Ethiopia)
Lake Wonchi (Ethiopia)
Lake Ziqualla (Ethiopia)
description Lakes Dendi, Wonchi and Ziqualla are among the few remnants of undisturbed crater lakes in the central highlands of Ethiopia, and have never been investigated reliably owing to seclusion and inaccessibility. As the lakes offer a pristine environment in a beautiful landscape and are located in the vicinity of the capital city Addis Ababa, they are highly threatened by unsustainable tourism, shoreline and crater rim modifications, water abstraction and land grabbing. We provide a first limnological description to establish baseline data against which future environmental and biological changes can be monitored. The lakes are located above 2,800 m elevation with no surface outflow and generally show low concentrations of ions, displaying an equal distribution of readily soluble components like Na or K throughout the water column, but distinct oxygen depletion in greater depths linked to rising concentrations of Fe and Mn, which indicates subterranean springs. Based on nutrients, chlorophyll a, and water transparency, lakes Dendi and Wonchi are classified as oligotrophic and Ziqualla as oligo-mesotrophic. The phytoplankton community is dominated by coccal green algae, desmids and dinoflagellates in lakes Dendi and Wonchi, typical for unpolluted dilute waterbodies; whereas chlorococcales, in particular Botryococcus braunii and benthic diatoms, prevail in Ziqualla. The zooplankton fauna is depauperate, comprising a total of 11 rotifer taxa and 13 crustaceans. Copepods were the most abundant group and contributed over 60% to the total zooplankton abundance in all three lakes, followed by rotifers and cladocerans. The conservation significance of these lakes lies predominantly in their representation of dilute, nutrient–poor highland lake systems that support diverse biota assemblages like desmids and daphnids, which are highly sensitive to eutrophication.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Degefu, Fasil
Herzig, Alois
Jirsa, Franz
Schagerl, Michael
author_facet Degefu, Fasil
Herzig, Alois
Jirsa, Franz
Schagerl, Michael
author_sort Degefu, Fasil
title First limnological records of highly threatened tropical high-mountain crater lakes in Ethiopia
title_short First limnological records of highly threatened tropical high-mountain crater lakes in Ethiopia
title_full First limnological records of highly threatened tropical high-mountain crater lakes in Ethiopia
title_fullStr First limnological records of highly threatened tropical high-mountain crater lakes in Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed First limnological records of highly threatened tropical high-mountain crater lakes in Ethiopia
title_sort first limnological records of highly threatened tropical high-mountain crater lakes in ethiopia
publisher Tropical Conservation Science
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10210/13131
http://ujcontent.uj.ac.za8080/10210/388642
genre Copepods
Rotifer
genre_facet Copepods
Rotifer
op_relation http://ujcontent.uj.ac.za8080/10210/388642
uj:5445
ISSN 1940-0829
http://hdl.handle.net/10210/13131
op_rights © 2014, Fasil Degefu, Alois Herzig, Franz Jirsa and Michael Schagerl
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