ISSN:
1573-5117
Keywords:
Tropical limnology
;
meromixis
;
nutrients
;
plankton
;
Nayarit
;
Mexico
;
Isabela island
Source:
Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
Topics:
Biology
Notes:
Abstract The Isabela Crater-Lake is a bright-green, hypersaline lake (68–112.5 mS cm-1) on Isabela Island off the Pacific coast of Nayarit, Mexico. Some salient features were documented in November 1993. It appears meromictic, with three well-defined strata separated by sharp pycnoclines. Surface water was warm (32 °C) reaching a subsurface (0.5–1 m) maximum temperature (33 °C), declining gradually to 26.7 °C at maximum depth (17.5 m). Dissolved oxygen was near saturation at the surface, attained 145 percent saturation at 0.5 m, but was completely absent by 2.5 m. Eh was maximum at the surface (123 mV), declining to a minimum at 3 m (–261 mV), and was about –240 mV from 3.5 m to the bottom. The pH varied from 9.3 in surface waters to slightly acid (6.4) in deep anoxic layers. Atypically, NO3 was more abundant than NH4 in both aerobic and anaerobic strata. PO4 and SiO2 concentrations were extremely high. The planktonic microbial community was formed by four groups: bacteria (photosynthetic sulfur bacteria and heterotrophic bacteria), phytoflagellates (mainly cryptomonads), heterotrophic nanoflagellates ( Spumella spp., Bodo spp.) and ciliates (Hypotricha and Oligotricha). Bacteria occurred throughout the water column, but other biota were restricted to surface waters.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1003239910574
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