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The monthly sampling data from June 2012 to May 2013 were used to study the composition and structure of the crustacean zooplankton community in the lakes and rivers of Suzhou Industrial Park. The variations in density and biomass of the crustacean zooplankton and their relationship with the environment factors were investigated. The results showed that a total of 42 species of crustacean zooplankton were found, including 24 species of cladocerans which belonged to 6 families and 12 genera, and 18 copepods which belonged to 7 families and 13 genera. The dominant species were Diaphanosoma brachyurum, Bosmina longirostris, Sinocalanus dorrii and Cyclops vicinus in all seasons of the year both in the rivers and the lakes. The density and biomass of the crustacean zooplankton in summer and autumn were higher than that in winter and spring, and there were two peaks in summer and autumn respectively both in the lakes and the rivers. The average density and biomass of cladocerans in the rivers were significantly higher than that in the lakes. There was no significant difference in the average density of Copepods between the rivers and the lakes, but the biomass in the rivers was higher than that in the lakes significantly. There were significant differences in dissolved oxygen, pH, Secchi depth, total dissolved solids, salinity, total phosphorus, total nitrogen and ammonium nitrogen between the lakes and the rivers. Redundancy analysis showed that the distribution of most of crustacean zooplankton was positively correlated with water temperature, the salinity, COD(Mn) and total phosphorus concentrations and only the distribution of the species belonging to genus Daphnia and Scapholeberis was positively correlated with O2 concentration, pH, and Secchi depth in both the rivers and the lakes in Suzhou Industrial Park.
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Biogerontology
August 2025
Department of Biological Sciences, East Tennessee State University, Johnson City, TN, 37614, USA.
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFHarmful Algae
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Centre for Ocean Life, DTU Aqua, Technical University of Denmark, Kemitorvet, 2800 Kongens Lyngby, Denmark; Marine Biological Section, University of Copenhagen, Strandpromenaden 5, 3000 Helsingør, Denmark. Electronic address:
Phytoplankton employ a wide variety of defenses to reduce mortality from zooplankton grazing. Many such defenses are inducible, that is, they are upregulated in the event of increased predation. Thus, theory predicts that they should come at a cost to the organism.
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October 2025
A.O. Kovalevsky Institute of Biology of the Southern Seas of RAS, 2 Nakhimov Ave., Sevastopol, 299011, Russian Federation.
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August 2025
Department of Ecology, Behavior and Evolution, Division of Biological Sciences, University of California, San Diego, California, USA.
Microbes contribute to aquatic ecosystem function and the fitness of macroscopic organisms, including zooplankton. Many factors affect the taxonomic compositions of free-living (bacterioplankton) and zooplankton-associated microbial communities in lakes; yet how these communities vary seasonally and among lakes remains poorly understood. Here, we investigate how free-living bacterial communities and those associated with different crustacean zooplankton hosts change in response to fluctuations in their natural environment across time and space.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
August 2025
Institute of Nature Conservation, Polish Academy of Sciences, al. Adama Mickiewicza 33, 31-120, Kraków, Poland.
We aimed to study how cyanobacterial blooms affect the use of the basal resources by three groups of crustacean zooplankton (calanoid and cyclopoid copepods, Daphnia spp.). We used measurements of naturally occurring stable isotopes of carbon (δC) and nitrogen (δN) to quantify the areas of isotopic niches (sample size-corrected standard ellipse areas; SEA) of planktonic crustaceans during the pre-bloom and cyanobacterial bloom phases.
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