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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/25251
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Title: | The use of diatoms (Bacillariophyta) as indicators of water quality in an intermittent, urban and highly polluted river in Bolivia |
Authors: | Morales, Eduardo A. Trujillo, Isabel Rodríguez, Inti Novais, Maria Helena Barbosa, Luciana G. Morais, Maria Manuela |
Keywords: | Intermittent river Rocha river urban river monitoring Specific Polluosensitivity Index (IPS) Shannon diversity index |
Issue Date: | Jun-2018 |
Publisher: | XIX Conference of the Iberian Association of Limnology Inland waters and XXI century challenges: from scientific knowledge to environmental management 24 – 29 June 2018, Coimbra, Portugal |
Citation: | XIX Conference of the Iberian Association of Limnology Inland waters and XXI century challenges: from scientific knowledge to environmental management. Coimbra, Portugal, 24-29 June 2018
Oral Presentation: Morales E.A., Trujillo I., Rodríguez I., Novais M.H., Barbosa L. & Morais M.M.
“The use of diatoms (Bacillariophyta) as indicators of water quality in an intermittent, urban and highly polluted river in Bolivia” |
Abstract: | The Rocha River is born at the foot of the Eastern Andes (2685 m
asl) and discharges into the Caine River (2527 m asl), after 70 km of
crossing the city of Cochabamba and semi-rural surrounding areas. Its
basin is inhabited by ca. 1.3 million people dedicated to agriculture,
plastic, paper, tannery/leather, poultry industries. The discharge peak
is reached in the rainy season (November-March, ca. 3 m3s-1) while
during the dry season (April-October) it is only ca. 0.5 m3s-1. The river
is contaminated by agricultural, factory and domestic waste. Especially
during the dry season, it turns dark green and emits strong sewage
odors. The present study intends to provide a monitoring tool for this
river, useful for recovery and management practices. Sampling took
place during the dry (2 dates) and rainy (1 date) seasons in 2008 at 6
stations in an agricultural/semiurban zone and 3 in urbanized areas.
Epilithic samples were obtained by brushing rocks and oxidized in the
laboratory with nitric acid to produce permanent slides using Naphrax
mounting medium. Microscope identifications at 1000X were made
using specialized literature. Water chemistry was measured in situ
and in the laboratory. The Shannon diversity index and the Specific
Polluosensitivity Index (IPS) were calculated and both species counts
and IPS values were analyzed using CCA (Canonical Correspondence
Analysis). The diatom community along the river was composed of
276 species and varieties. The most specious genera were Nitzschia,
Gomphonema, Navicula, Ulnaria, Pinnularia and Fragilaria, which
together comprise 77% of the total diatom community. Species
composition varied at each of the 9 stations along the three sampling
dates. There is no underlying river or land use typology, but localities
associated with agriculture had higher species numbers, while sites
associated with urban development had a lower number of taxa.
41% of the taxa were unknown, hindering the calculation of the IPS,
which nevertheless shows a low (agricultural sites) and the lowest
(urban sites) quality for both dry and rainy seasons. Despite the lower
number of taxa used in the index calculation, the categorization
correlates well with water chemistry (R2 adjusted=0.45), being
temperature, BOD5 and orthophosphates the variables showing the
highest correlations with taxa and index values. Thus, diatoms are a
useful tool for monitoring the Rocha River and could be applied to
other rivers in the semiarid region of the Bolivian Andes. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/25251 |
Type: | lecture |
Appears in Collections: | ICT - Comunicações - Em Congressos Científicos Internacionais
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