Document of bibliographic reference 347894

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Book chapters
BibLvlCode
AMS
Title
Zooplankton diversity and their spatiotemporal distribution: an ecological assessment from a brackish coastal lagoon, Chilika, Odisha
Abstract
Zooplankton constitutes a pivotal component in the pelagic food webs and serves as the major source of fish diet, thereby determining the productivity of coastal fisheries. Therefore, understanding zooplankton diversity and their ecology in coastal lagoon settings is a high priority research area. We examined the spatiotemporal distribution of zooplankton diversity (size >120 μm) in relation to environmental variables in Chilika lagoon. The sampling was conducted on the monthly frequency from July 2012 to June 2016 from 13 locations and identified a total of 186 zooplankton taxa which included 131 as first record from the Chilika lagoon. To date, a total inventory of 263 species of holoplankton represented by 16 diverse categories of organisms, namely, Ciliophora (51), Foraminifera (13), Tubulinea (5), Rotifera (42), Hydrozoa (1), Ctenophora (1), Nematoda (1), Polychaeta (3), Gastropoda (12), Bivalvia (5), Cladocera (13), Copepoda (95), Ostracoda (4), Malacostraca (13), Chaetognatha (2), Chordata (2), and 23 types of meroplankton were identified. Chilika lagoon exhibited a significant variation in salinity (0–35.5) at spatiotemporal scale and consisted of marine, brackish, and freshwater zooplankton along the estuarine salinity gradient. Copepods emerged as one of the most dominant and diverse zooplankton group in terms of species richness, abundance, and widespread distribution. Among the four orders of Copepoda (i.e., Calanoida, Cyclopoida, Harpacticoida, and Poecilostomatoida), Calanoida was the most abundant one. An important component of total zooplankton pool, i.e., microzooplankton (20–200 μm), was also examined in relation to environmental variables. Ciliophora dominated the microzooplankton community followed by copepod nauplii and Rotifera, except in the freshwater zone of the lagoon. Foraminifera, cirripede nauplii, gastropod veliger, and bivalve veliger were minor contributors in microzooplankton. Salinity and phytoplankton abundances were the major factors influencing microzooplankton community composition. The present study highlighted the necessity of a long-term systematic monitoring of zooplankton diversity and composition in Chilika lagoon.
Bibliographic citation
Srichandan, S.; Rastogi, G. (2022). Zooplankton diversity and their spatiotemporal distribution: an ecological assessment from a brackish coastal lagoon, Chilika, Odisha, in: Madhav, S. et al. Coastal Ecosystems - Environmental importance, current challenges and conservation measures. Coastal Research Library, 38: pp. 201-238. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-84255-0_9
Topic
Brakish water

Authors

author
Name
Suchismita Srichandan
author
Name
Gurdeep Rastogi

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-84255-0_9

taxonomic terms

taxonomic terms associated with this publication
Copepoda [copepods]

Document metadata

date created
2021-12-07
date modified
2021-12-07