Title: Phytoplankton
1Phytoplankton
- Photosynthetic autotrophs (algae) drifting
passively in aquatic environments - Some common phyla
- Euglenophyta (euglenoids)
- Pyrrhophyta (dinoflagellates)
- Bacillariophyta (diatoms)
- Chlorophyta (green algae)
2Absorption spectra for different algal pigments
3Plankton sampling techniques
4Plankton counting techniques
Sedgewick-Rafter Counting Cells
Palmer Counting Cells
5The number of species recorded from the same
water body depends on.
- Sampling method (net or water samples)
- Number and location of sampling stations
(littoral vs. pelagic presence of floating
macrophytes, etc.) - Time span of the investigation
- Time of the year (and time of the day)
6Phytoplankton communities in the tropics
- Lack of comprehensive data on phytoplankton
communities in the tropics. - Even so, there seems no trend towards increased
algal diversity towards the equator (applies to
lakes, rivers, wetlands and reservoirs).
7Euglenophyta
Euglena
Phacus
8Dinoflagellates (Pyrrhophyta)
Ceratium
9Red Tide A bloom of dinoflagellates
10Swimming with bioluminescent dinoflagellates
11Diatoms (Bacillariophyta)
Cyclotella
Navicula
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13Diatoms Diatom diversity (left), Pinnularia
(left)
14Diatom shell
15Single celled, colonial and multicellular
chlorophytes
Caulerpa
Volvox
Pediastrum
16Periphyton growing along rocks in mesotrophic
Lake Titicaca, Peru)
17N is more frequently limiting to freshwater
production in tropical lakes and rivers.
Source Downing et al. 1998
- N may be lost from aquatic systems more rapidly
- in the tropics than the temperate zone (e.g.
through denitrification)
- P erosion from tropical landscapes and P
mobilization - in aquatic environments may be more rapid.
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19Species Caulerpa taxifolia Division
Chlorophyta ClassUlvophyceae Native range
Hawaii, Brazil, SE Asia (i.e., tropical). Now
Worldwide distribution with large outbreaks after
accidental introduction in the Mediterranean,
Southern California and Australia. Successful
invader because (1) rapid reproduction/spread
with fragmentation, (2) lack of natural grazers,
(3) rapid growth, and (4) toxic to herbivores
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21Lewis, 1990
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