Title: Benthic Fauna
1Benthic Fauna
2Benthic Fauna
- Extremely diverse group of organisms
- Many different groups, difficult to generalize
about patterns
3Distribution and Abundance
- Limited by few general characteristics
- Food availability
- Type of substrate
- Few phys/chem factors, especially dissolved oxygen
4Littoral vs. Profundal
- Benthic animals living in littoral region more
varied than those in profundal region - Reflection of
- 1) abundance of microhabitats
- 2) less stressful living conditions
5Littoral Benthos
- Protozoans, sponges, coelenterates, rotifers,
nematodes, bryozoans, decapods, ostracods,
cladocerans, copepods, bivalves, snails, insects,
leeches
6Littoral Benthos
- Microbenthos - very tiny
- Vastly outnumber macrobenthos, and may contribute
up to 50 of benthic production
7Littoral Benthos
- Seldom food limited
- Proximity to phytoplankton, macrophytes
8Sublittoral Benthos
- Boundary between littoral profundal
- Species diversity drops off sharply
- Mussels, ostracods, copepods, cladocerans from
littoral - few typical dwellers
9Profundal Benthos
- Very poor diversity
- Oxygen limited
- Other stressors
- Colder
- Lower pH
- Higher CO2, CH4, organics, P, NH3
- Few can survive under these conditions
10Profundal Benthos
- Profundal benthos in eutrophic lakes resemble
those of grossly polluted systems - Low diversity, monotony - great number of
individuals, but only 1 or 2 species represented
11Typical Profundal Assemblage
- Chironomus midge larvae
- Hemoglobin picks up limited oxygen
- May also be able to use anaerobic respiration
excrete products of this process
12Typical Profundal Assemblage
- Oligochaete worms Tubifex, Limnodrilus
- Bury heads in organic sediments, wave tails with
gills - Can develop huge populations (10,000/m2)
- Preyed on heavily by predaceous Chironomus
13Typical Profundal Assemblage
- Fingernail clams in genus Pisidium
- Become dormant during anaerobic periods
- May also inhabit temporary ponds
14Typical Profundal Assemblage
- Phantom midge larvae - Chaoborus
- Temporary occupants - spend day on sediments,
migrate into water column at night to prey on
zooplankton - Not very tolerant of anoxia
15Typical Profundal Assemblage
- Also several microscopic forms that tolerate low
oxygen - Some protozoan ciliates and flagellates, some
nematodes
16General Standing Crop
- Most lakes have profundal benthos that averages
5 g wet weight/m2 - 1/2 g dry weight/m2
17Less Productive Lakes
- Profundal benthos more diverse in less productive
(oligotrophic) lakes - Major reason oxygenated sediment-water interface
18Less Productive Lakes
- More species of midge larvae, oligochaetes,
immature insects like mayflies - Hexagenia - burrowing mayfly
19Less Productive Lakes
- Also more crustaceans like the amphipod
Pontoporeia - Makes vertical migrations up to metalimnion at
night (doesnt eat zooplankton)
20General Benthos Pattern
- Diverse group in heterogenous, oxygenated
littoral zone - Less diversity in more homogeneous profundal zone
(less in more productive lakes)
21Maxima of Abundance
Two maxima - one in littoral - one in profundal
biomass
depth
22Maxima of Abundance
As systems become more productive, zone of max.
production shifts from littoral to
profundal, then declines in profundal
biomass
depth
Midges replaced by oligochaetes
23Seasonal Abundance Patterns
- Lowest in summer (especially in insect-dominated
communities) - Emergence of adults, high predation
- Maximum densities and growth typically in autumn
and winter in temperate zone
24Predation by Fish
- Predation can drastically reduce invertebrate
standing crop - May be gt50 of populations in some littoral areas
- Predation losses in profundal areas generally
much lower
25Predation by Fish
- Despite intense predation pressure, benthos
dynamics and production mostly controlled by food
supply