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Succession of the ecosystems of the Aral Sea during its transition from oligohaline to polyhaline water body
During 22 field trips from 1990 to 2002 (mainly the western basin of the Large Aral) data on salinity, phytoplankton, zooplankton, zoobenthos and fish fauna have been collected. In 2002, the salinity of the western basin reached 75 ppt, while that in the eastern basin, 150 ppt. In 1999–2002, 159 spe...
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Published in: | Journal of marine systems 2004-06, Vol.47 (1), p.101-107 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
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Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | During 22 field trips from 1990 to 2002 (mainly the western basin of the Large Aral) data on salinity, phytoplankton, zooplankton, zoobenthos and fish fauna have been collected. In 2002, the salinity of the western basin reached 75 ppt, while that in the eastern basin, 150 ppt. In 1999–2002, 159 species of planktonic algae have been recorded. This is approximately twice as low as recorded before. The diversity of Cyanophyta, Pyrrhophyta and Chlorophyta in particular has dropped in the past few years. As before, currently Bacillariophyta is the most diverse plankton. However, the composition of dominants has changed. Once previously dominant species,
Actinocyclus ehrenbergii, vanished from the plankton of the Aral Sea and was replaced by such diatoms as
Amphora coffeaformis,
A. coffeaformis var.
acutiuscula and
Synedra tabulata var.
parva.
Since 1970s, a gradual decrease in the diversity of zooplankton has been taking place. Since 1997, the formerly dominant
Calanipeda aquaedulcis vanished, which apparently was the reason for the emergence of
Moina salina and
Artemia parthenogenetica. Since 2000, artemia has been dominant in the plankton of the Aral Sea, constituting 99% of the zooplankton biomass.
In the 1970–1980s, a rapid decrease in the biodiversity of the zoobenthos was observed. In the 1990s, most aboriginal and introduced species became extinct. Currently, the bivalve mollusk
Syndosmya segmentum, the ostracod
Cyprideis torosa and larvae of the dipteran
Chironomus salinarius can still be recorded in the western basin. In the eastern basin no benthos is observed.
By 1998, in the Large Aral, only five fish species survived: baltic herring
Clupea harengus membras, flounder
Platichthys flesus luscus, atherine
Atherina boyeri caspia and bullheads
Neogobius fluviatilis and
Potamoschistus caucasicus. Since 2002, only flounder and atherina have been recorded in the western basin of the Large Aral. No fish have been recorded in the eastern part of the Aral Sea in 2002.
With increasing salinity and transition of the Aral Sea from an oligohaline to a polyhaline water body, its biota is becoming drastically poorer. Almost all local species became extinct in the Aral; however, some still survive (including some endemics) in some lakes around the Aral Sea. In the near future, artemia will be the only animal in the Aral Sea. |
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ISSN: | 0924-7963 1879-1573 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jmarsys.2003.12.012 |