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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Remediation Sign in to save

Water and Sediment Chemistry as Drivers of Macroinvertebrates and Fish Assemblages in Littoral Zones of Subtropical Reservoirs

Water 2023 5 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Thendo Mutshekwa, Thendo Mutshekwa, Linton F. Munyai Linton F. Munyai Thendo Mutshekwa, Thendo Mutshekwa, Linton F. Munyai Thendo Liphadzi, Thendo Liphadzi, Thendo Mutshekwa, Linton F. Munyai Linton F. Munyai Thendo Mutshekwa, Linton F. Munyai Linton F. Munyai Linton F. Munyai Linton F. Munyai Lubabalo Mofu, Lubabalo Mofu, Lubabalo Mofu, Florence M. Murungweni, Florence M. Murungweni, Florence M. Murungweni, Mulalo I. Mutoti, Linton F. Munyai Linton F. Munyai Lubabalo Mofu, Lubabalo Mofu, Linton F. Munyai Linton F. Munyai Florence M. Murungweni, Florence M. Murungweni, Lubabalo Mofu, Lubabalo Mofu, Linton F. Munyai

Summary

This paper is not about microplastic pollution. It examines how water chemistry and sediment metal concentrations drive macroinvertebrate and fish communities in the littoral zones of three subtropical reservoirs in South Africa, finding that anthropogenic activities like car washing and wastewater treatment contribute metals to the sediments.

Study Type Environmental

Reservoirs are human-made ecosystems with diverse purposes that benefit humans both directly and indirectly. They however cause changes in geomorphological processes such as sediment cycling and influence the composition and structure of aquatic biota. This study aimed to identify water and sediment quality parameters as drivers of macroinvertebrates and fish communities during the cool-dry and hot-wet seasons in the littoral zones of three subtropical reservoirs (Albasini, Thathe and Nandoni). Macroinvertebrates and fish were collected from three sites (n = 3 from each site) in each reservoir. A total of 501 and 359 macroinvertebrates and fish individuals were collected throughout the sampling period, respectively. The present study employed a two-way ANOVA in conjunction with redundancy analysis (RDA) to assess the relationships that exist between water and sediment variables, macroinvertebrates diversity and species abundances across seasons. Based on the two-way ANOVA model, significant differences were observed across reservoirs for evenness, Simpson’s diversity, and total abundance, while seasonal differences were observed for most metrics, with exception for evenness. The RDA results identified four water variables (i.e., water temperature, oxidation–reduction potential, pH and conductivity) and one sediment metal (Mg) as the most important parameters in driving the fish community structure. Field observations and metal results attest that the Nandoni reservoir shows high concentrations of metals in sediments as compared to other reservoirs, suggesting that anthropogenic activities such as car washing, brick making, recreation, fishing, wastewater treatment work and landfill site may be the major contributor of metals to the Nandoni reservoir, which accumulate in the littoral zones. Findings of this study highlight the need to analyze reservoir ecological conditions at several scales. The study of macroinvertebrates and fish, water, and sediment chemistry in the littoral zone laid the groundwork for proposing measures for conserving aquatic ecosystems.

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