Comparison of Gastropod Assemblages from Natural and Phosphate Mine Lakes of Central Florida

Investigations were made examining the relationships between gastropod species richness and abundance across 20 phosphate and 20 natural lakes in Central Florida. In additional to lake category, age of phosphate lakes was used to determine if phosphate lakes ever approximate natural lakes. Additiona...

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Main Author: Mailand, William A.
Format: Others
Published: Scholar Commons 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/5830
http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7040&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-70402018-03-16T05:17:50Z Comparison of Gastropod Assemblages from Natural and Phosphate Mine Lakes of Central Florida Mailand, William A. Investigations were made examining the relationships between gastropod species richness and abundance across 20 phosphate and 20 natural lakes in Central Florida. In additional to lake category, age of phosphate lakes was used to determine if phosphate lakes ever approximate natural lakes. Additional physical, chemical, and biological parameters, including chlorophyll a, Ca, secchi, phosphorous, conductance, fish predation, and recreational lake use were investigated in order to determine if they affected gastropods with lake age. Comparisons were also made between gastropod species richness and average abundance and two groups of dominant vegetation categories: Panicum, a structurally complex macrophyte, and Typha, a less structurally complex macrophyte. After phosphate mining operations are completed, Florida state regulations require the establishment of ecologically viable habitat (created lakes) which reflects the properties of regional natural lakes including vegetation structure, littoral zone, bank slope, and lake depth. The littoral zone is part of the mandated structure of the lake, and is of considerable importance to the uptake, storage, transformation and release of nutrients. Within the littoral zone, gastropods are a critical link in the food web with implications for the long term structure and function of a lake. They are known for their close associations with macrophytes and are common environmental indicators since they have limited mobility, high diversity, are well studied, are representative of their habitat type and have a widespread geographic range. They are also an important food sources for many predators in aquatic environments, include migratory waterfowl and game fish. Gastropod species richness and abundance data were collected via standard net sweep methodology. Abundance was presented in catch per unit effort, therefore all abundance data were averages. Initial comparisons between gastropod species richness and average abundance yielded no significant differences between natural and phosphate lakes. However, when age was applied as a covariate, there was a significant difference between lake age as a continuous variable in species richness comparisons. Additionally, categorical comparisons between lakes older or younger than 30 years indicated significantly higher species richness and average abundance of gastropods in lakes phosphate lakes older than 30 years. Physical and chemical properties of the lakes did not appear to influence gastropod populations between lakes of different ages. Fish predation interactions did not indicate any significant influence either. However, the presence of boat ramps did indicate a positive relationship between average gastropod abundance and species richness and recreational lake use. Littoral zone macrophyte comparisons between dominant vegetation Typha and Panicum indicated a significantly positive relationship between gastropod species richness and average abundance in older phosphate lakes dominated by the more structurally complex Panicum macrophytes. Confidence in the Typha and Panicum results was confounded by lack of access to younger, Typha dominated, phosphate lakes. An increase in sample size for younger Typha lakes, with additional site access, may further support these findings. 2015-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/5830 http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7040&context=etd default Graduate Theses and Dissertations Scholar Commons benthic invertebrates macrophytes lake age Integrative Biology Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic benthic invertebrates
macrophytes
lake age
Integrative Biology
Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology
spellingShingle benthic invertebrates
macrophytes
lake age
Integrative Biology
Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology
Mailand, William A.
Comparison of Gastropod Assemblages from Natural and Phosphate Mine Lakes of Central Florida
description Investigations were made examining the relationships between gastropod species richness and abundance across 20 phosphate and 20 natural lakes in Central Florida. In additional to lake category, age of phosphate lakes was used to determine if phosphate lakes ever approximate natural lakes. Additional physical, chemical, and biological parameters, including chlorophyll a, Ca, secchi, phosphorous, conductance, fish predation, and recreational lake use were investigated in order to determine if they affected gastropods with lake age. Comparisons were also made between gastropod species richness and average abundance and two groups of dominant vegetation categories: Panicum, a structurally complex macrophyte, and Typha, a less structurally complex macrophyte. After phosphate mining operations are completed, Florida state regulations require the establishment of ecologically viable habitat (created lakes) which reflects the properties of regional natural lakes including vegetation structure, littoral zone, bank slope, and lake depth. The littoral zone is part of the mandated structure of the lake, and is of considerable importance to the uptake, storage, transformation and release of nutrients. Within the littoral zone, gastropods are a critical link in the food web with implications for the long term structure and function of a lake. They are known for their close associations with macrophytes and are common environmental indicators since they have limited mobility, high diversity, are well studied, are representative of their habitat type and have a widespread geographic range. They are also an important food sources for many predators in aquatic environments, include migratory waterfowl and game fish. Gastropod species richness and abundance data were collected via standard net sweep methodology. Abundance was presented in catch per unit effort, therefore all abundance data were averages. Initial comparisons between gastropod species richness and average abundance yielded no significant differences between natural and phosphate lakes. However, when age was applied as a covariate, there was a significant difference between lake age as a continuous variable in species richness comparisons. Additionally, categorical comparisons between lakes older or younger than 30 years indicated significantly higher species richness and average abundance of gastropods in lakes phosphate lakes older than 30 years. Physical and chemical properties of the lakes did not appear to influence gastropod populations between lakes of different ages. Fish predation interactions did not indicate any significant influence either. However, the presence of boat ramps did indicate a positive relationship between average gastropod abundance and species richness and recreational lake use. Littoral zone macrophyte comparisons between dominant vegetation Typha and Panicum indicated a significantly positive relationship between gastropod species richness and average abundance in older phosphate lakes dominated by the more structurally complex Panicum macrophytes. Confidence in the Typha and Panicum results was confounded by lack of access to younger, Typha dominated, phosphate lakes. An increase in sample size for younger Typha lakes, with additional site access, may further support these findings.
author Mailand, William A.
author_facet Mailand, William A.
author_sort Mailand, William A.
title Comparison of Gastropod Assemblages from Natural and Phosphate Mine Lakes of Central Florida
title_short Comparison of Gastropod Assemblages from Natural and Phosphate Mine Lakes of Central Florida
title_full Comparison of Gastropod Assemblages from Natural and Phosphate Mine Lakes of Central Florida
title_fullStr Comparison of Gastropod Assemblages from Natural and Phosphate Mine Lakes of Central Florida
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of Gastropod Assemblages from Natural and Phosphate Mine Lakes of Central Florida
title_sort comparison of gastropod assemblages from natural and phosphate mine lakes of central florida
publisher Scholar Commons
publishDate 2015
url http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/5830
http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7040&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT mailandwilliama comparisonofgastropodassemblagesfromnaturalandphosphateminelakesofcentralflorida
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