Spelling suggestions: "subject:"phytoplanktonpopulationen yay."" "subject:"phytoplanktonpopulationen aay.""
1 |
An Annual Cycle of Phytoplankton Populations in Kaneohe Bay, OahuMurphy, Carol Menge 05 1900 (has links)
The present study, planned as a quantitative investigation
of the phytoplankton of Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, over a
period of one year, was undertaken to supplement present
knowledge of seasonal, distributional, floristic, and
ecological features of the phytoplankton in Kaneohe Bay.
The objectives of this study were:
1. To identify and enumerate phytoplankton collected
at selected stations at re~ular intervals over a
period of one year
2. To attempt to determine the factors that control
variations in the qualitative and quantitative
makeup of the phytoplankton
3. To relate the quantitative data obtained in this
study with other ecological data obtained by
other investigators in a concurrent study. / Typescript. Thesis (M. S.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 1972. Bibliography: leaves [106]-109.
|
2 |
Temporal and spatial variations in phytoplankton productivity and related factors in the surface waters of Kaneohe Bay, Oahu, HawaiiKrasnick, George J 20 April 2010 (has links)
Data on primary productivity, chlorophyll a, nitrate,
and phosphate in surface waters were collected on a 14-month (March, 1970 to April, 1971) series of approximately
biweekly cruises in Kaneohe Bay, Oahu, Hawaii. During the latter part of the survey data ammonium ion concentrations
and light penetration through the water column were
also collected. The year is divided into two seasons on
the basis of rainfall, and the effects on the dynamics of
the phytoplankton community of terrestrial runoff and
sewage effluents entering the bay are separated on the
basis of differences between wet season and dry season
productivity indices (productivity/Chl. a). The bay is
divided into three sectors; South, Transition, and North.
The most important nutrient sources are; the Kaneohe
Municipal Sewage Treatment Plant effluent to the South
Sector, terrestrial runoff to the Transition Sector, and a
persistent, but unidentified nitrate input to the North
Sector. The Municipal Treatment Plant effluent is shown
to be toxic to phytoplankton in the immediate area.
Phosphate concentration is not correlated with rainfall,
and is present in non-limiting concentrations in all
sectors. Nitrate concentration is strongly correlated with
rainfall in the Transition Sector, and low dry season
(summer) concentrations may limit phytoplankton growth.
Wet season (winter) nitrate concentrations in the other two sectors are also higher than summer values, but the differences
are not significant. Fluctuations in phytoplankton
population size seem to be primarily a function of
variable grazing pressure by herbivorous zooplankton.
Phytoplankton growth rates peak in summer and winter, and
may be related to the availability of light. Light penetration itself
is directly related to phytoplankton
density in the water column, and the winter growth rate
peak may result from increasing light penetration due to
extensive grazing on the phytoplankton population. The
present data are compared with similar data collected 10
years earlier. Based on a hyperbolic relationship between
substrate concentration and growth rate, the South Sector
is shown to have been eutrophic for at least the past
decade, while in the Transition and North Sectors symptoms
of eutrophication have appeared during this decade. / Typescript. Theses for the degree of Master of Science (University of Hawaii at Manoa)--University of Hawaii, 1973. Bibliography: leaves 87-90.
|
Page generated in 0.0432 seconds