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Journal ArticleDOI

The non-indigenous diatom Didymosphenia geminata alters benthic communities in New Zealand rivers

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TLDR
Although ecosystem effects of D. geminata on existing periphyton biomass and invertebrate communities are measurable, no inferences can be made from the present data about effects on higher trophic levels (fish).
Abstract
SUMMARY 1. Blooms of the benthic, stalked diatom Didymosphenia geminata were first observed in New Zealand in 2004. Since then, D. geminata has spread to numerous catchments in the South Island and is also spreading in its native range. The species is a rare example of an invasive alga in lotic systems. 2. Ecosystem effects may be expected as D. geminata attains unusually high biomass in rivers. We examined data from three independent studies in three South Island, New Zealand, rivers for evidence of effects on periphyton biomass and benthic invertebrate communities. 3. The combined results confirmed that the presence of D. geminata was associated with greatly increased periphyton biomass and, in most cases, increased invertebrate densities. We also recorded shifts in community composition, dominated by increased densities of Oligochaeta. Chironomidae, Cladocera and Nematoda also generally increased in density with D. geminata. Significant increases or declines in other invertebrate taxa were inconsistent among rivers. 4. In all three studies, increased spatial invertebrate community homogeneity was associated with high D. geminata biomass at the within-river scale. However, no declines in taxon richness or diversity were detected. 5. Although ecosystem effects of D. geminata on existing periphyton biomass and invertebrate communities are measurable, no inferences can be made from the present data about effects on higher trophic levels (fish).

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Book ChapterDOI

Harmful Algal Blooms

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Recent views on river pollution and diatoms

TL;DR: The objective of this review was to describe the state of the art of the study of diatoms and river pollution between 1999 and 2009 and to group the publications homogeneously according to subject and to indicate which subjects never overlap.
Journal ArticleDOI

The arrival and spread of the bloom-forming, freshwater diatom, Didymosphenia geminata, in New Zealand.

TL;DR: Examination of the spread of D. geminata over five years in New Zealand suggested mass dispersal of an invasive organism via human vectors, consistent with angler-mediated dispersal from catchment to catchment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental control of stalk length in the bloom‐forming, freshwater benthic diatom didymosphenia geminata (bacillariophyceae)1

TL;DR: Results are consistent with the hypothesis that extensive stalk production in D. geminata occurs when cell division rates are nutrient limited and light levels are high, and may explain the development of very high biomass in this species in oligotrophic rivers.
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Molecular genetic tools for environmental monitoring of New Zealand's aquatic habitats, past, present and the future

TL;DR: This review examines molecular tools that have been previously or are currently used for monitoring aquatic environments in New Zealand, and explores how these, and new techniques, may be applied in the future.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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