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Relative salinity tolerance of freshwater macroinvertebrates from the south-east Eastern Cape, South Africa compared with the Barwon Catchment, Victoria, Australia

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posted on 2024-11-23, 06:37 authored by Benjamin Kefford, Carolyn Palmer, Dayanthi NugegodaDayanthi Nugegoda
Salinity is rising in many southern African and Australian rivers with unknown effects on aquatic organisms. The extent of spatial variation, at any scale, in salt tolerances of aquatic organisms is unknown, so whether data from one location is applicable elsewhere is also unknown. The acute tolerances (72-h median lethal concentration (LC50)) to sea salt of 49 macroinvertebrate taxa from the south-east Eastern Cape (SEEC), South Africa were compared with those of 57 species from the Barwon Catchment, Victoria, Australia. The mean LC50 values from both locations were similar (Barwon: 31 and SEEC: 32 mS cm(-1)) and less abundant (rare) taxa tended to be more tolerant than more abundant (common) taxa. There was, however, a greater range of LC50 values (5.5-76 mS cm(-1)) in the Barwon Catchment than in the SEEC (11-47 mS cm(-1)). The species sensitivity distribution (SSD) for SEEC taxa was bimodal whereas the Barwon Catchment's SSD had a single peak. With few exceptions, members of an order had similar tolerances in both locations. The differences in SSD between locations were related to crustacean, odonate and non-arthropod relative richness. Although it is not ideal to extrapolate SSDs from one location to another, it may be reasonable to assume similar salinity tolerances among related taxa.

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  1. 1.
    ISSN - Is published in 13231650

Journal

Marine and Freshwater Research

Volume

56

Issue

2

Start page

163

End page

171

Total pages

9

Publisher

CSIRO Publishing

Place published

Collingwood, Australia

Language

English

Copyright

© CSIRO 2005

Former Identifier

2005000180

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2009-02-27

Open access

  • Yes

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