SEASONAL PERIODICITY OF CHRYSOPHYCEAE AND SYNUROPHYCEAE IN A SMALL NEW ENGLAND LAKE: IMPLICATIONS FOR PALEOLIMNOLOGICAL RESEARCH1

1992 
The seasonal periodicity of taxa of Chrysophyceae and Synurophyceae from a small New England lake is described for the period September 1983 through June 1988. We found 51 taxa, including 29 that accounted for over 10% of the total in at least one collection. The taxa were fitted into one of five seasonal patterns. Patterns I and II represented taxa restricted to warm (pattern I) or cold (pattern II) months, respectively. Pattern HI represented organisms that began growth in the summer, persisted through autumn and disappeared with the onset of an ice cover. Pattern IV was an extension of pattern III, in which the taxon remained in the plankton throughout the winter and disappeared soon after ice out. Species without a clear seasonal pattern were grouped as pattern V. The seasonal periodicity of the flora, as examined with ordination analyses, was found to remain remarkedly similar during the 58–month study. Except for episodes of low pH during spring snow melt and unseasonally warm or cold weather, sample scores followed a fairly consistent pattern along the first and second primary axes. Water temperature, specific conductance, and pH were important variables that controlled changes in the species composition during the course of a given year. The flora was used to develop an inference model for water temperature. According to the analyses, the remains of a surface sediment sample represented a flora that grew primarily during the late autumn period at 7.6 ° C. Ways in which seasonal data could be utilized to improve paleolimnological inference work are discussed.
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