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In temperate zones, algae biomass may be efficiently controlled by Daphnia sp., which is the most significant grazer among filter-feeding zooplankton. Daphnia population dynamics depends mostly on the trophic state of the ecosystem, which determines both fish community structure and food quality and availability. Relatively invariable water inflow to a reservoir with small amplitudes supports balanced biotic interactions. Here, we present simulations using the DALIS model that well characterised behaviour in a temperate ecosystem under stable abiotic conditions. The model results allowed us to predict the extent to which predation by fish would disturb the dynamics of Daphnia under different food conditions. Therefore, mathematical modelling may be an important tool for establishing appropriate recovery strategies in eutrophic water bodies. Although the model in this study characterised temperate zone conditions, its application to tropical lakes, where the dynamics of zooplankton and fish are substantially different, is discussed.
Hydroacoustical methods due to their very high resolution in time and space can be used to register subtle changes in fish distribution and behaviour, thus enabling observation of the effect of habitat modification upon the fish. A number of examples have been presented which show dependence between fish parameters measured acoustically (such as depth, density, degree of aggregation, length frequency distribution), and different environmental parameters characterising the habitat quality (trophic levels, presence of chemicals, littoral coverage, predation pressure, temperature and oxygen gradients). This suggest that by performing hydroacoustical monitoring one can measure fish reactions to the habitat changes on a scale and with an accuracy not available with other methods.
Number of species (S), density (N) and standing crop (B) were investigated in 331 sites in the catchment of the Narew River, the biggest tributary of the Vistula, against 4 categories of riparian ecotone intensity in various-width rivers. All populations were first analyzed together, then within the scope of three most abundant ecological spawning groups. The image obtained is to some extent blurred by anthropogenic alterations as well as humancreated ecotones, yet it is evident that a total lack of bankside trees had a negative impact on the values of S, N and B of all investigated populations. Exceptions are only small streams of the Bialostocka Upland, where at a high percentage of submerged vegetation and occasionally stony bottom (washed away moraine bars), the lack of riparian trees did not cause any decrease in any of the three populational parameters. The uninterrupted compact forestation of the banks was positively correlated with S, N and B only in the lower Narew River, where the river bed was more than 100 m wide, hence where the access of light was not already limited. For lithophilous species a river's naturalness was a more important factor conditioning their abundance than the development of riparian ecotones. Indifferent species displayed a high, positive dependence on the development of ecotones, while phytophils (whose development is vegetation-dependent) formed the most qualitatively and quantitatively abundant populations at a weak, and in some rivers, even medium forestation of the banks.
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