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Spatiotemporal variability in a copepod community associated with fluctuations in salinity and trophic state in an artificial brackish reservoir at Saemangeum, South Korea

Saemangeum Reservoir in South Korea is an estuarine system enclosed by a dyke construction, where seawater inflow and retained water outflow are managed by the opening/closing of sluice gates installed in the southern part of the dyke. An exchange of the reservoir water can cause spatiotemporal fluc...

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Autores principales: Oda, Yusuke, Nakano, Sho, Suh, Jong-Mo, Oh, Hye-Ji, Jin, Mei-Yan, Kim, Yong-Jae, Sakamoto, Masaki, Chang, Kwang-Hyeon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6301670/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30571703
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209403
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author Oda, Yusuke
Nakano, Sho
Suh, Jong-Mo
Oh, Hye-Ji
Jin, Mei-Yan
Kim, Yong-Jae
Sakamoto, Masaki
Chang, Kwang-Hyeon
author_facet Oda, Yusuke
Nakano, Sho
Suh, Jong-Mo
Oh, Hye-Ji
Jin, Mei-Yan
Kim, Yong-Jae
Sakamoto, Masaki
Chang, Kwang-Hyeon
author_sort Oda, Yusuke
collection PubMed
description Saemangeum Reservoir in South Korea is an estuarine system enclosed by a dyke construction, where seawater inflow and retained water outflow are managed by the opening/closing of sluice gates installed in the southern part of the dyke. An exchange of the reservoir water can cause spatiotemporal fluctuations in the salinity and trophic state, which are major drivers determining variation in the composition of biological communities in estuarine systems. Here, we investigated the seasonal and spatial variability in the copepod community and environmental conditions (water temperature, salinity, transparency, chlorophyll a concentration, total nitrogen, total phosphorus and Carlson’s trophic state index) based on seasonally conducted field monitoring in the Saemangeum Reservoir from July 2013 to January 2018. In addition to the role of temperature, salinity and chlorophyll a concentration in structuring the copepod community and diversity, the biological indices of copepods with respect to salinity range and trophic state, were evaluated. The spatiotemporal variability in the salinity and trophic state variables showed contrasting patterns, and chlorophyll a concentration was negatively affected by salinity, indicating that the reservoir water was being highly exchanged with opening of the sluice gates. The mean trophic state index values, however, were constant in the eutrophic state (50―70). Dominant copepods were Acartia (A. hudsonica, A. sinjiensis, Acartia spp.) and Oithona (O. davisae and Oithona spp.), which are common species in eutrophic neritic water. Variation in the copepod community was mainly associated with the seasonal succession of the dominant species rather than a spatial gradient (from around the estuary to the sluice gates); however, site-specific differences in frequencies of several non-dominant species could be detected around the estuary (Sinocalanus tenellus) and the sluice gates (Centropages spp., Tigriopus spp. and Labidocera rotunda). The copepod diversity increased with species-richness from around the estuary to the sluice gates, which could result from variation in the site-specific location of non-dominant species. The frequency of particular species was also able to discriminate in terms of the salinity range (oligohaline: A. pacifica, S. tenellus and A. sinjiensis; mesohaline: Pseudodiaptomus inopinus; and polyhaline: C. abdominalis and Centropages spp.) and the trophic state (mesotrophic: C. abdominalis, Calanus sinicus and Centropages spp.; and hypereutrophic: S. tenellus, P. inopinus and Sinocalanus spp.). The findings from this study not only identify the factors determining spatiotemporal variation in the copepod community in the Saemangeum Reservoir, but also expand the applicability of copepods as biological indicators of conditions associated with salinity range and trophic state in other enclosed estuarine systems.
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spelling pubmed-63016702019-01-08 Spatiotemporal variability in a copepod community associated with fluctuations in salinity and trophic state in an artificial brackish reservoir at Saemangeum, South Korea Oda, Yusuke Nakano, Sho Suh, Jong-Mo Oh, Hye-Ji Jin, Mei-Yan Kim, Yong-Jae Sakamoto, Masaki Chang, Kwang-Hyeon PLoS One Research Article Saemangeum Reservoir in South Korea is an estuarine system enclosed by a dyke construction, where seawater inflow and retained water outflow are managed by the opening/closing of sluice gates installed in the southern part of the dyke. An exchange of the reservoir water can cause spatiotemporal fluctuations in the salinity and trophic state, which are major drivers determining variation in the composition of biological communities in estuarine systems. Here, we investigated the seasonal and spatial variability in the copepod community and environmental conditions (water temperature, salinity, transparency, chlorophyll a concentration, total nitrogen, total phosphorus and Carlson’s trophic state index) based on seasonally conducted field monitoring in the Saemangeum Reservoir from July 2013 to January 2018. In addition to the role of temperature, salinity and chlorophyll a concentration in structuring the copepod community and diversity, the biological indices of copepods with respect to salinity range and trophic state, were evaluated. The spatiotemporal variability in the salinity and trophic state variables showed contrasting patterns, and chlorophyll a concentration was negatively affected by salinity, indicating that the reservoir water was being highly exchanged with opening of the sluice gates. The mean trophic state index values, however, were constant in the eutrophic state (50―70). Dominant copepods were Acartia (A. hudsonica, A. sinjiensis, Acartia spp.) and Oithona (O. davisae and Oithona spp.), which are common species in eutrophic neritic water. Variation in the copepod community was mainly associated with the seasonal succession of the dominant species rather than a spatial gradient (from around the estuary to the sluice gates); however, site-specific differences in frequencies of several non-dominant species could be detected around the estuary (Sinocalanus tenellus) and the sluice gates (Centropages spp., Tigriopus spp. and Labidocera rotunda). The copepod diversity increased with species-richness from around the estuary to the sluice gates, which could result from variation in the site-specific location of non-dominant species. The frequency of particular species was also able to discriminate in terms of the salinity range (oligohaline: A. pacifica, S. tenellus and A. sinjiensis; mesohaline: Pseudodiaptomus inopinus; and polyhaline: C. abdominalis and Centropages spp.) and the trophic state (mesotrophic: C. abdominalis, Calanus sinicus and Centropages spp.; and hypereutrophic: S. tenellus, P. inopinus and Sinocalanus spp.). The findings from this study not only identify the factors determining spatiotemporal variation in the copepod community in the Saemangeum Reservoir, but also expand the applicability of copepods as biological indicators of conditions associated with salinity range and trophic state in other enclosed estuarine systems. Public Library of Science 2018-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC6301670/ /pubmed/30571703 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209403 Text en © 2018 Oda et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Oda, Yusuke
Nakano, Sho
Suh, Jong-Mo
Oh, Hye-Ji
Jin, Mei-Yan
Kim, Yong-Jae
Sakamoto, Masaki
Chang, Kwang-Hyeon
Spatiotemporal variability in a copepod community associated with fluctuations in salinity and trophic state in an artificial brackish reservoir at Saemangeum, South Korea
title Spatiotemporal variability in a copepod community associated with fluctuations in salinity and trophic state in an artificial brackish reservoir at Saemangeum, South Korea
title_full Spatiotemporal variability in a copepod community associated with fluctuations in salinity and trophic state in an artificial brackish reservoir at Saemangeum, South Korea
title_fullStr Spatiotemporal variability in a copepod community associated with fluctuations in salinity and trophic state in an artificial brackish reservoir at Saemangeum, South Korea
title_full_unstemmed Spatiotemporal variability in a copepod community associated with fluctuations in salinity and trophic state in an artificial brackish reservoir at Saemangeum, South Korea
title_short Spatiotemporal variability in a copepod community associated with fluctuations in salinity and trophic state in an artificial brackish reservoir at Saemangeum, South Korea
title_sort spatiotemporal variability in a copepod community associated with fluctuations in salinity and trophic state in an artificial brackish reservoir at saemangeum, south korea
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6301670/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30571703
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209403
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