Seasonal patterns of colonization by protozoa in an oligotrophic lake

Seasonal effects on protozoan colonization of polyurethane foam (PF) units were investigated in.an oligotrophic lake, Mountain Lake, Virginia. PF units were placed into the lake's pelagic water to simulate barren habitat islands suitable for colonization by protozoa. The results were interprete...

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Main Author: Van Brunt, Michael R.
Other Authors: Zoology
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/88587
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-885872020-09-26T05:37:50Z Seasonal patterns of colonization by protozoa in an oligotrophic lake Van Brunt, Michael R. Zoology LD5655.V855 1984.V352 Limnology -- Virginia -- Mountain Lake Protozoa -- Virginia -- Mountain Lake Mountain Lake (Va.) Seasonal effects on protozoan colonization of polyurethane foam (PF) units were investigated in.an oligotrophic lake, Mountain Lake, Virginia. PF units were placed into the lake's pelagic water to simulate barren habitat islands suitable for colonization by protozoa. The results were interpreted with respect to the MacArthur-Wilson equilibrium theory of island biogeography. Results showed seasonal changes can cause a substantial amount of instability in colonization curves. Within a season, changes in the lake's planktonic species pool were more prominent during the decay of the thermocline than during Fall or Spring overturn and Summer stratification. For different seasons, the relationship between changes in the lake's planktonic species pool and species accrual on PF units was positive, for total species and for ciliate species. For different seasons, the relationship between changes in colonization rate and species accrual was consistent with MacArthur-Wilson theory. In contrast, for different seasons, the relationship between changes in equilibrium number of species and species accrual was inconsistent with MacArthur-Wilson theory, and this places in question the interseasonal predictive value of colonization curves. For some situations where the MacArthur-Wilson equation for insular colonization did not describe adequately the colonization a modified equation was developed. The modified equation was used to account roughly for species which may rapidly colonize and persist in PF unit communities and described adequately more total species colonization curves than the unmodified equation. Moreover, the modified equation was a useful tool for the interpretation of PF unit colonization by protozoa. Master of Science 2019-03-26T19:17:00Z 2019-03-26T19:17:00Z 1984 Thesis Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/88587 en_US OCLC# 11645417 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ vi, 94 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V855 1984.V352
Limnology -- Virginia -- Mountain Lake
Protozoa -- Virginia -- Mountain Lake
Mountain Lake (Va.)
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1984.V352
Limnology -- Virginia -- Mountain Lake
Protozoa -- Virginia -- Mountain Lake
Mountain Lake (Va.)
Van Brunt, Michael R.
Seasonal patterns of colonization by protozoa in an oligotrophic lake
description Seasonal effects on protozoan colonization of polyurethane foam (PF) units were investigated in.an oligotrophic lake, Mountain Lake, Virginia. PF units were placed into the lake's pelagic water to simulate barren habitat islands suitable for colonization by protozoa. The results were interpreted with respect to the MacArthur-Wilson equilibrium theory of island biogeography. Results showed seasonal changes can cause a substantial amount of instability in colonization curves. Within a season, changes in the lake's planktonic species pool were more prominent during the decay of the thermocline than during Fall or Spring overturn and Summer stratification. For different seasons, the relationship between changes in the lake's planktonic species pool and species accrual on PF units was positive, for total species and for ciliate species. For different seasons, the relationship between changes in colonization rate and species accrual was consistent with MacArthur-Wilson theory. In contrast, for different seasons, the relationship between changes in equilibrium number of species and species accrual was inconsistent with MacArthur-Wilson theory, and this places in question the interseasonal predictive value of colonization curves. For some situations where the MacArthur-Wilson equation for insular colonization did not describe adequately the colonization a modified equation was developed. The modified equation was used to account roughly for species which may rapidly colonize and persist in PF unit communities and described adequately more total species colonization curves than the unmodified equation. Moreover, the modified equation was a useful tool for the interpretation of PF unit colonization by protozoa. === Master of Science
author2 Zoology
author_facet Zoology
Van Brunt, Michael R.
author Van Brunt, Michael R.
author_sort Van Brunt, Michael R.
title Seasonal patterns of colonization by protozoa in an oligotrophic lake
title_short Seasonal patterns of colonization by protozoa in an oligotrophic lake
title_full Seasonal patterns of colonization by protozoa in an oligotrophic lake
title_fullStr Seasonal patterns of colonization by protozoa in an oligotrophic lake
title_full_unstemmed Seasonal patterns of colonization by protozoa in an oligotrophic lake
title_sort seasonal patterns of colonization by protozoa in an oligotrophic lake
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/88587
work_keys_str_mv AT vanbruntmichaelr seasonalpatternsofcolonizationbyprotozoainanoligotrophiclake
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