Abstract
Episodic switching between Tropodiaptomus spectabilis and Metadiaptomus meridianus in L. Midmar (29°30′S, 30° 12′ E), and transitory seasonal alternation of these taxa in L. Albert Falls (29° 26′ S, 30°26′ E), recorded in comparative studies of these inter-leading reservoirs between 1989 and 1999, along with historical records for Midmar extending back to 1978, are updated and re-evaluated in light of subsequent and additional findings. In the longer term, an ‘exclusive’ occupancy by one or another species has been maintained in these and other inter-leading impoundments on the quasi-subtropical Mgeni River. Sympatry was invariably transitional. It lasted several months in the upper Midmar system, and where protracted over several years as in the downstream Albert Falls system, was effectively negated by seasonal separation of the taxa. Possible influences of parasitism, changes in water turbidity or pH, dependent or independent of inter-basin water transfers, and such water transfers themselves, are explored and rejected as proximate causes of species replacement. Because evidence for the existence of resting eggs was contradictory (respectively present and absent in preserved and live samples), emergence from diapause is considered an unlikely source of re-colonisation. The guild complement of invertebrate planktivores is comparable in both lakes, seemingly removing predation as a determinant factor. The comparability of food thresholds for various measures of demographic performance suggests remarkable similarity in the competitive potential of these species, which additionally show considerable niche overlap in terms of adult diet, and comparable vulnerability to ellobiopsid parasitism. Ecological separation is thus limited to differentiation of thermal optima, functional feeding biology of juvenile stages - especially nauplii, and sediment tolerance. Evidence now available supports previous arguments that species separations remain attributable largely to marginal species differences in thermal optima, mirrored in the pattern of seasonal separation during an episode of sympatry (1990 to early 1994) in the downstream Albert Falls system. While no causal explanation can be substantiated from evidence gleaned during this decade of study, the species replacements observed in Midmar appear to reflect alternative stable states, induced by presently unknown factor(s), plausibly temperature, or improbably, human translocation. By contrast, alternative stable states are not manifest in Albert Falls, wherein the longer term, T. spectabilis seemingly represents the only stable state, a feature apparently shared by other warmer reservoirs down the Mgeni cascade. The unpredictability of chaotic dynamics precludes its analysis in this situation, while conversely, the system provides a unique model for meta-population analysis, related to uni-directionality of natural dispersal. However, the cost-effectiveness of continued monitoring for unforeseeable events poses a serious practical dilemma.
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
Key words
References
Archibald, C. G. M., R. J Warwick, B. K. Fowles, M. S. Muller & A. C. Bulter. 1980a. Midmar Dam. In Walmsley, R. D. & M. Butty (eds), Limnology of Some Selected South African Impoundments. A collaborative report by the Water Research Commission and the National Institute for Water Research, Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, Pretoria: 165–175.
Archibald, C. G. M., R. J. Warwick, B. K. Fowles, M. S. Muller, & A. C. Bulter. 1980b. Albert Falls Dam. In Walmsley, R. D. & M. Butty (eds), Limnology of Some Selected South African Impoundments. A collaborative report by the Water Research Commission and the National Institute for Water Research, Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, Pretoria: 131–141.
Begon, M.,J. L. Harper & C. R. Townsend, 1996. Ecology. Individuals, Populations and Communities. 3rd edn. Blackwell Scientific, Oxford: 1068 pp.
Gliwicz, Z. M. & J. Pijanowska, 1989. The role of predation in zooplankton succession. In Sommer, U. (ed.), Plankton Ecology. Succession in Plankton Communities. Brock/Springer-Verlag, Berlin: 253–296.
Hart, R. C., 1986. Zooplankton abundance, community structure and dynamics in relation to inorganic turbidity, and their implications for a potential fishery in subtropical Lake le Roux, South Africa. Freshwat. Biol. 16: 351–371.
Hart, R. C. 1987. Population dynamics and production of five crustacean zooplankters in a subtropical reservoir during years of contrasting turbidity. Freshwat. Biol. 18: 287–318.
Hart, R. C., 1992. Aspects of comparative plankton ecology in forcascading Mgeni River reservoirs (Midmar, Albert Falls, and Nagle): an overview. S. Afr. J. aquat. Sci. 18: 20–41.
Hart, R. C., 1994a. Equiproportional temperature-duration re-sponses and thermal influences on distribution and species switching in the copepods Metadiaptomus meridianus and Tropodiaptomus spectabilis. Hydrobiologia 272: 163–183.
Hart, R. C., 1994b. Seasonal replacement in two calanoid copepods with equivalent adult dietary niches: the influence of temperature. Verh. int. Ver. Limnol. 25: 2439–2444.
Hart, R. C., 1996a. Comparative ecology of plankton in cascading warm-water reservoirs: aspects of relevance to tropical limnology. In Schiemer, F. & K. T. Boland (eds), Perspectives in Tropical Limnology. SPB Academic Publishing bv, Amsterdam: 113–130.
Hart, R. C., 1996b. Naupliar and copepodite growth and survival of two freshwater calanoids at various food levels: Demographic contrasts, similarities and food needs. Limnol. Oceanogr. 41: 648–658.
Hart, R. C., 1998. Comparative functional feeding responses of two seasonally alternating African calanoids: the importance of juvenile instars in inter-specific differentiation. Verh. int. Ver. Limnol. 26: 1945–1951.
Hart, R. C., 1999. On the limnology of Spioenkop, a turbid reservoir on the upper Thukela River, with particular reference to the structure and dynamics of its plankton community. Water SA 25: 519–528.
Hart, R. C. & N. A. Rayner, 1994. Temperature-related distributions of Metadiaptomus and Tropodiaptomus (Copepoda: Calanoida), particularly in southern Africa. Hydrobiologia 272: 77–86.
King, E. M., 1984. The zooplankton of Lake Midmar. Unpublished M.Sc. Thesis, Department of Zoology, University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg: 234 pp.
King, E. M., N. A. Rayner, M. F. Griffiths & J. Heeg, 1986. Factors affecting the elimination of Tropodiaptomus spectabilis and its replacement by Metadiaptomus transvaalensis in an oligotrophic lake. Syllogeus 58: 341–345.
Lohner, L. M., N. G. Hairston & W. R. Schaffner, 1990. A method for distinguishing subitaneous and diapausing eggs in preserved samples of the calanoid copepod genus Diaptomus. Limnol. Oceanogr. 35: 763–767.
Moss, B., 1989. Water pollution and the management of ecosystems: a case study of science and scientist. In Grubb, P. J. & J. B. Whittaker (eds), Toward a More Exact Ecology. Blackwell Scientific, Oxford: 401–422.
Moss, B., 1998. Shallow lakes, biomanipulation and eutrophication. SCOPE Newsletter 29: 1–45.
Rayner, N. A & J. Heeg, 1994. Distribution patterns ofthe Diaptomidae (Calanoida: Copepoda) in southern Africa. Hydrobiologia 272: 47–75.
Rayner, N. A & E. M. King, 1986. First record of a freshwater calanoid Tropodiaptomus spectabilis (Kiefer, 1929) (Crustacea, Copepoda) as host of an ellobiopsid parasite. J. Plankton Res. 8: 837–840.
Sommer, U., 1989. Toward a Darwinian ecology of plankton. In Sommer, U. (ed.), Plankton Ecology. Succession in Plankton Communities. Brock/Springer-Verlag, Berlin: 1–8.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2001 Kluwer Academic Publishers
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Hart, R.C. (2001). Two calanoids, two lakes, and a decade or two. An updated record and evaluation of occurrence and periodicity of Tropodiaptomus spectabilis and Metadiaptomus meridianus (Copepoda: Calanoida), and alternative stable states in two cascading impoundments. In: Lopes, R.M., Reid, J.W., Rocha, C.E.F. (eds) Copepoda: Developments in Ecology, Biology and Systematics. Developments in Hydrobiology, vol 156. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/0-306-47537-5_22
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/0-306-47537-5_22
Publisher Name: Springer, Dordrecht
Print ISBN: 978-0-7923-7048-2
Online ISBN: 978-0-306-47537-5
eBook Packages: Springer Book Archive