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Some aspects of photosynthetic characteristics in a set of perennial irrigation reservoirs located in five river basins in Sri Lanka

journal contribution
posted on 2002-10-01, 00:00 authored by E Silva, U Amarasinghe, S De Silva, C Nissanka, F Schiemer
Phytoplankton primary productivity of eleven irrigation reservoirs located in five river basins in Sri Lanka was determined on a single occasion together with light climate and nutrient concentrations. Although area-based gross primary productivity (1.43–11.65 g O2 m−2 d−1) falls within the range already established for tropical water bodies, net daily rate was negative in three water bodies. Light-saturated optimum rates were found in water bodies, with relatively high algal biomass, but photosynthetic efficiency or specific rates were higher in water bodies with low algal biomass, indicating nutrient limitation or physiological adaptation of phytoplankton. Concentrations of micronutrients and algal biomass in the reservoirs are largely altered by high flushing rate resulting from irrigation release. Underwater light climate and nutrient availability control the rate of photosynthesis and subsequent areabased primary production to a great extent. However, morpho-edephic index or euphotic algal biomass in the most productive stratum of the water column is not a good predictor of photosynthetic capacity or daily rate of primary production of these shallow tropical irrigation reservoirs.

History

Journal

Hydrobiologia

Volume

485

Issue

1-3

Pagination

19 - 33

Publisher

Kluwer Academic Publishers

Location

Dordrecht, Nethrlands

ISSN

0018-8158

eISSN

1573-5117

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal; C Journal article

Copyright notice

2002, Kluwer Academic Publishers

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