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Use of flow management to mitigate cyanobacterial blooms in the Lower Darling River, Australia

The growth of planktonic cyanobacteria in a weir pool on the Lower Darling River, Australia, downstream of the major regulated Menindee Lake system was examined. Blooms of the saxitoxin producing freshwater cyanobacterium Anabaena circinalis occurred for two summers out of four studied. Large cell n...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of plankton research 2011-02, Vol.33 (2), p.229-241
Main Authors: Mitrovic, Simon M., Hardwick, Lorraine, Dorani, Forugh
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The growth of planktonic cyanobacteria in a weir pool on the Lower Darling River, Australia, downstream of the major regulated Menindee Lake system was examined. Blooms of the saxitoxin producing freshwater cyanobacterium Anabaena circinalis occurred for two summers out of four studied. Large cell numbers of other cyanobacteria including Aphanizomenon, Planktolyngbya and Merismopedia also occurred during the same summer periods as the Anabaena blooms. The growth events also coincided with periods of improved light climate. Flow releases from the regulated Menindee Lakes System were assessed for their ability to either suppress bloom development or to mitigate pre-existing blooms over this period. A discharge of 300 ML/day (flow velocity of 0.03 m/s) was found to be sufficient to prevent prolonged periods of persistent thermal stratification, which also suppressed the development of A. circinalis blooms. A flow release of 3000 ML/day was effective at removing an established cyanobacterial bloom, and total cyanobacterial numbers declined from over 100 000 to
ISSN:0142-7873
1464-3774
DOI:10.1093/plankt/fbq094