The Relationship between Benthic Macroinvertebrate Assemblages and Water Quality Parameters in the Sanyati Basin, Lake Kariba, Zimbabwe

This study aimed at assessing the structure of benthic macroinvertebrate communities in relation to physicochemical parameters along Sanyati basin shoreline in Lake Kariba, Zimbabwe. Six sites (S1 to S6) characterized by various human disturbances were sampled for physicochemical parameters and benthic macroinvertebrates from January to March 2018. We computed macroinvertebrate metrics and classified them into functional feeding groups (FFGs). A canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) triplot was constructed to assess species-physicochemical relations. Significant differences across the sampling sites were observed for pH, electrical conductivity, turbidity, nitrate-nitrogen (NO3-N), ammonium nitrogen (NH4-N), total nitrogen (TN), phosphate-phosphorus (PO4-P), total phosphates (TP), and dissolved oxygen (DO). The results from CCA highlighted that S1 was generally associated with high pH, NH4-N, and TN, and Oligochaeta, Syrphidae, and Hydrophilidae families. The highest percentage of EPT taxa (39.83%) was recorded at S6, while the lowest was recorded at S1. The taxa were made up of 50% predators, 26% collector-gatherers, 6% scrappers, 6% shredders, and 3% collector-filters with 3 taxa (Chironomidae, Hydropsychidae, and Leptoceridae) having more than two FFGs. Site S1 had a significantly higher mean abundance of collector-gatherers than the other sites. A high correlation between water parameters and SASS and ASPT scores was observed indicating their ability to detect environme...
Source: The Scientific World Journal - Category: Science Authors: Source Type: research