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B.W. Ho, A. R. Pape , C. Stice , N.S. Penoncello , L. Gauthier

Zooplankton Community Assessment in Baron Pond . B.W. Ho, A. R. Pape , C. Stice , N.S. Penoncello , L. Gauthier. www.ri.net. Introduction. Location Magee Rd. (5.6 miles N.E. of Gennesse ID.) Interest in management and fishery. Objectives.

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B.W. Ho, A. R. Pape , C. Stice , N.S. Penoncello , L. Gauthier

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  1. Zooplankton Community Assessment in Baron Pond B.W. Ho, A. R. Pape, C. Stice, N.S. Penoncello, L. Gauthier www.ri.net

  2. Introduction • Location • Magee Rd. (5.6 miles N.E. of Gennesse ID.) • Interest in management and fishery

  3. Objectives • Determine the biotic community of Baron Pond. • Determine zooplankton and macro-invertebrate species abundance and distribution • Assess whether zooplankton and macro-invertebrate community is sufficient to support a fishery within the pond www.noaa.gov

  4. Hypotheses • 1: Zooplankton and macro-invertebrate species vary in abundance between the littoral and pelagic areas of the pond. • Ho: There is no difference between littoral and pelagic abundances. • 2: The zooplankton and macro-invertebrate community is sufficient to support a fishery within the pond. • Ho: The community will not be sufficient to support a fishery within the pond.

  5. Methods • Sampled 2 pelagic sites with Wisconsin-style zooplankton tow net (12.5 cm, 80 µm) • Sampled 2 littoral sites with D-net (251.6 cm2, 500 µm). • Samples preserved with formalin (10%) • Counted zooplankton using dissecting microscopes • Analyzed data using Microsoft Excel

  6. Methods: 1 • Two sampling sites • Pelagic zone 1: 1.9 m (6.5 Liters) • Pelagic zone 2: 3.0 m (19.6 Liters) • Obtained triplicate samples • Sampling limitations • Tow length = site depth-net length • Not representative of entire water column • Bias toward surface www.dynamicaqua.com

  7. Study Site Pelagic zone 1 (3 m) Pelagic zone 2 (1.9m)

  8. Methods: 2 • Two littoral sampling sites • 1.5 m from shore • Volume sampled 26,312 L/site • Obtained triplicate samples • Sampling limitations • Shape of net difficult to calculate area of sample --Accuracy www.dynamicaqua.com

  9. Study Site Pelagic zone 1 Littoral zone 2 Pelagic zone 2 Littoral zone 1

  10. Methods: 3 • Pelagic samples condensed using 80 µm mesh • Littoral samples condensed using 500 µm • Samples were preserved in formalin until analysis

  11. Methods: 4 • Samples washed of formalin • Complete pelagic tow counts • Direct enumeration /back calculation • Littoral zone samples counted • Subdivided/ back calculated

  12. Results: Littoral

  13. Results: Pelagic

  14. Results • Statistical analysis compared abundances in littoral vs. pelagic sites • Significantly more Calanoids in pelagic (p-value=.01) • More Chironomids in littoral sample (p-value=.03) • Previous research indicates zooplankton vital to supporting fisheries : • Daphnia • Bosmina

  15. Future Research • Refine sampling methods • Time of year influences estimates • Many invertebrates entering quiescence/diapause by November • Sample size • Schindler trap may reduce bias of pelagic sampling • Seine net may be better for sampling littoral zone

  16. Acknowledgements • Frank M. Wilhelm, Tara Johnson (U of I) • Mike and Beverly Baron (Landowners) www. missouristate.edu

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