Members of the meiobenthos have been used extensively to determine the effects of
anthropogenic perturbation in marine systems (Coull & Chandler, 1992). Despite this, the
meiofauna has been virtually excluded from freshwater pollution monitoring. This thesis
aimed to address this research caveat, by evaluating the potential of stream meiofauna for
monitoring metal-contamination. Meiofaunal communities were sampled from streams in
SW England representing a gradient in metal contamination. Environmental variables in
these streams were also measured to identify the important forcing agents structuring the
stream benthos. Multivariate techniques demonstrated Cu, either alone or in combination
with other environmental variables was of most importance in correlations with the
composition of meiofaunal communities. Comparison with the macrofaunal data
demonstrated that both components of the benthos responded in a similar way to metal
contamination, although the meiofauna also highlighted other differences in water
chemistry. The combination of meiofauna, macrofauna and temporary meiofauna in a
combined metazoan community analysis gave the best discrimination of sites. Detection of
metal-contamination was retained in meiofaunal data aggregated to the family level.
The abundances of the harpacticoid copepod Bryocamptus zschokkei were consistently
important in contributing to between-site differences in community structure. The
harpacticoid, therefore was selected as an ecologically-relevant freshwater toxicity test for
Cu. Laboratory experiments demonstrated that Cu had toxic effects on the survival and
reproduction of Bryocamptus zschokkei. Although acute toxicity tests gave more rapid
results, these effects on survival occurred at a higher Cu concentration than those in the
chronic tests. Sub-lethal concentrations of Cu led to a reduction in the numbers of offspring
per brood Animals with pre-exposure to chronic concentrations of Cu exhibited greater
tolerance to this metal.
In conclusion, more information may be gained by including the meiofauna, alongside the
macrofauna, when monitoring the impact of contaminants on freshwater systems. To
reduce the effort of processing samples it appears family level data could be used to detect
metal-contamination. The novel use of B. zschokkei in laboratory tests, where it showed
lethal and sub-lethal responses to Cu, demonstrated that this species may have much
potential as an ecologically-relevant freshwater bioassay organism for this metal. The
advantages of using meiofaunal species such as B. zschokkei as toxicity test organisms are
discussed.
Date of Award | 1998 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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EVALUATION OF STREAM MEIOFAUNA AS A MONITOR OF TRACE METAL CONTAMINATION
BURTON, S. M. (Author). 1998
Student thesis: PhD