INALI   02622
INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE LIMNOLOGIA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Bloom forming planktonic Cyanobacteria in Argentina: where do we stand? International Society of Limnology
Autor/es:
FORASTIER M.; MEICHTRY N.; O'FARRELL I.; POLLA W.; MOTTA C.; DEVERCELLI M.; OTAÑO S.; LOMBARDO R.
Lugar:
Torino
Reunión:
Congreso; 33rd Congress of the International Society of Limnology; 2016
Institución organizadora:
SIL
Resumen:
Through a meta-analysis of the bloom-forming cyanobacteria, we aimed to synthesise the main reasons that explain the distribution of their blooms in Argentina. We analysed in detail published academic literature, information in technical reports and in non-published studies from 1944 till 2015 in a territory that covers a variety of climates ranging from humic tropical to cold temperate through approximately 3700 km (21°46'S to 66°31'W). Blooms were registered in shallow and deep lakes, rivers, streams, reservoirs, estuaries and storage facilities located along the six lake regions defined for Argentina: Puna, Chaco-Pampa Plain, Peri-Pampean Sierras, Andean Patagonia, Patagonia Plateau and Misiones Plateau. We defined as a quantitative indicator of a bloom a threshold abundance of 5000 cel/ml for a single species in accordance to legislation available in countries located at similar latitudes (Brazil and Australia) as there are no alert levels defined for Argentina. The intensity -maximum registered abundance-, species and ecological strategy responsible of each bloom were related to the geographic and climatologic characteristics of the corresponding location and the type of aquatic system.We registered and geo-referenced 130 locations related to those aquatic environments affected by cyanobacterial blooms. Puna and the Andean Patagonia regions are free of blooms with the exception of a shallow lake in the latter area. Shallow lakes and reservoirs, appear as the most prone aquatic systems to experience blooms in all regions (44 and 24% of the studied sites, respectively). Deep lakes have no reports ; only at Lake Musters, in the Patagonia Plateau, there is a registered value that is close to the here considered threshold abundance. Rivers are mainly affected at the regulated reaches and the intensity of blooms generally decreases downstream the dams. There were more than 30 different species responsible of the blooms as identified by Komárek?s polyphasic approach to taxonomy. Microcystis aeruginosa, Dolichospermum spiroides and Cylindrospermopsis raciborskii were the most frequent, either in mixed or single species blooms. Species distribution differs according the geographic location and the type of aquatic system. While Microcystis aeruginosa has a wide geographical distribution through Argentina, Cylindrospermopsis raciborskii is mainly circumscribed to the north-eastern territory. On the other hand, the limnological characteristics of the systems are closely related to the eco-strategy of the prevailing bloom-forming species.