The investigation of the zooplankton community in the newly formed Ribb Reservoir, Ethiopia: the tropical highland reservoir.

Dagnew Mequanent, Minwyelet Mingist, Abebe Getahun, Wassie Anteneh, Banchiamlak Getnet, Solomon Birie
Author Information
  1. Dagnew Mequanent: Department of Fisheries, Wetlands and Wildlife Management, College of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences, Bahir Dar University, P. O. Box 79, Bahir Dar, Ethiopia.
  2. Minwyelet Mingist: Department of Fisheries, Wetlands and Wildlife Management, College of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences, Bahir Dar University, P. O. Box 79, Bahir Dar, Ethiopia.
  3. Abebe Getahun: Department of Zoological Sciences, Addis Ababa University, P. O. Box 1176, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
  4. Wassie Anteneh: Department of Biology, College of Science, Bahir Dar University, P.O. Box 79, Bahir Dar, Ethiopia.
  5. Banchiamlak Getnet: Department of Fisheries, Wetlands and Wildlife Management, College of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences, Bahir Dar University, P. O. Box 79, Bahir Dar, Ethiopia.
  6. Solomon Birie: Department of Biology, Debre Tabor University, Ethiopia.

Abstract

Understanding the composition, diversity, and abundance of the zooplankton community is crucial for better utilization of the Ribb Reservoir, as zooplankton are the second link in the food chain in aquatic systems (they are also excellent bioindicators of aquatic health, given their central food web position) and the reservoir also serves as a source of income for the fishers. Therefore, sampling including some water quality parameters was conducted twice in the four seasons: autumn, summer, spring, and winter, from September 2020 to August 2021, in the first week of September, December, February, March, May, June, and August. Most of the physicochemical parameter values recorded in this study indicated that they were within the range of standards for zooplankton community requirements. Of the 14 species identified, , , and had the first, second, and lowest records, respectively. Species abundance showed a decrease from autumn to winter and then to spring and summer. Species richness (14), abundance (6736), Margalef's diversity index (1.48), Menhinick's diversity index (0.17), Simpson index (0.098), dominance index (0.902), Shannon index (2.47), equality index (0.934), and reciprocal Simpson index (10.2) of the species were calculated in the reservoir. Some of the proposed management measures include reservoir buffering, impact assessment of over-abstraction of water for irrigation, time series of water quality data, and the reservoir water level should be above the conduit.

Keywords

References

  1. J Plankton Res. 2019 Nov;41(6):925-938 [PMID: 31920210]
  2. J Exp Biol. 2012 Mar 15;215(Pt 6):1008-16 [PMID: 22357594]
  3. Zookeys. 2017 Nov 13;(715):39-51 [PMID: 29302231]
  4. Cell. 2019 Nov 14;179(5):1084-1097.e21 [PMID: 31730851]
  5. Heliyon. 2021 Mar 19;7(3):e06523 [PMID: 33817380]
  6. Braz J Biol. 2004 Aug;64(3A):447-58 [PMID: 15622842]

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0indexreservoirzooplanktonwater0diversityabundancecommunityReservoirqualityRibbsecondfoodaquaticalsoautumnsummerspringwinterSeptemberAugustfirst14speciesSpeciesSimpson2UnderstandingcompositioncrucialbetterutilizationlinkchainsystemsexcellentbioindicatorshealthgivencentralwebpositionservessourceincomefishersThereforesamplingincludingparametersconductedtwicefourseasons:20202021weekDecemberFebruaryMarchMayJunephysicochemicalparametervaluesrecordedstudyindicatedwithinrangestandardsrequirementsidentifiedlowestrecordsrespectivelyshoweddecreaserichness6736Margalef's148Menhinick's17098dominance902Shannon47equality934reciprocal10calculatedproposedmanagementmeasuresincludebufferingimpactassessmentover-abstractionirrigationtimeseriesdatalevelconduitinvestigationnewlyformedEthiopia:tropicalhighlandDiversityIrrigationPlanktonSustainableuseresourceWater

Similar Articles

Cited By

No available data.