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Effects of a Natural Fish Kill on the Water Quality, Plankton, and Fish Population of a Pond in the Big Cypress Swamp, Florida

 

作者: JamesA. Kushlan,  

 

期刊: Transactions of the American Fisheries Society  (Taylor Available online 1974)
卷期: Volume 103, issue 2  

页码: 235-243

 

ISSN:0002-8487

 

年代: 1974

 

DOI:10.1577/1548-8659(1974)103<235:EOANFK>2.0.CO;2

 

出版商: Taylor & Francis Group

 

数据来源: Taylor

 

摘要:

A naturally occurring fish kill took place during the southern Florida dry season when receding water levels forced aquatic organisms out of shallow swamps and into a small pond. Physico-chemical parameters of water quality varied greatly from their usual range as did the abundance of phytoplankton which reached a peak of 2.5 X 109cells per liter. The fish kill had no effect on the long-term limnological characteristics of the pond, as water quality returned to normal range within 2 months and phytoplankton disappeared within 1 month after the fish kill. The species of fish in the pond showed a range of susceptibility to low oxygen concentration and other aspects of the fish kill. They were classified into three categories based upon their survival: Notemigonus crysoleucas, Lucania goodei, and all centrarchids were eliminated rapidly; Fundulus chrysotus, Poecilia latipinna, Heterandria formosa, and Ictalurus natalis were either eliminated late in the fish kill or survived in numbers lower than measurable by methods used in this study; Lepisosteus platyrhincus, Gambusia affinis, Jordanella floridae and the prawn Palaemonetes paludosus survived the fish kill in moderate densities of 0.6 to 6 individuals/m2In three species of Lepomis, larger fish died before smaller ones. Six of 22 species of fish and only 0.6% of the previous fish population survived the fish kill.

 

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