Temporal Variations in the Abundance and Diversity of Surface Zooplankton in the South Coast of Sri Lanka

Authors

  • H.B.U.G.M. Wimalasiri Department of Zoology, University of Sri Jayewardenepura, Sri Lanka
  • S.U.P. Jinadasa
  • D.C.T. Dissanayake

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31357/fesympo.v21i0.3071

Keywords:

Zooplankton, Abundance, Diversity, Cluster analysis

Abstract

Zooplankton have extensively studied in the Indian Ocean, but very few systematic studies have been carried out in the marine waters around Sri Lanka. This study aimed to understand the temporal variations in the abundance and diversity of surface zooplankton in the south coast of Sri Lanka. Surface zooplankton samples were collected at five different locations in the south coast of Sri Lanka in November 2015 (second inter monsoon), December 2015 (Northeast monsoon, NE) and May 2016 (Southwest monsoon SW) using R/V Samuddrika. The vertical hauls of zooplankton were collected from 5 m depth at each station using WP-2 net with 180 μm mesh size and samples were immediately preserved in 5% buffered formalin. At the laboratory, zooplankton were identified to the lowest possible taxon using existing guides, species diversity, abundance (ind/m3), evenness and richness were estimated with respect to three different sampling phases. The data were subjected to hierarchical cluster analysis to identify the similarity between temporal variation and zooplankton abundance. A total of 152 zooplankton species were identified during this study. Species belonging to phylum Arthropoda appeared be the most abundant group and their standing crop (whole time period and sites) was 1906±115 ind/m3. Arthropods occupied nearly 86% of total zooplankton community. Among arthropods, order Poecilostomatoida showed the highest abundance (858±8 ind/m3) followed by phylum Protochordata (~3% and average of 74 ind/m3) chetognaths (2.1%) and mollusks (~1.9%). The highest species abundance was recorded in Novemver (1392±5 ind/m3) and lowest was in May (360±2 ind/m3). Species diversity was also highest in November and lowest in May. Cluster analysis revealed two clearly visible abundance clusters with respect to time. The results indicated that there are significant temporal variations in zooplankton abundance (ANOVA, P<0.05) in the South coast of Sri Lanka.
Keywords: Zooplankton, Abundance, Diversity, Cluster analysis

Author Biography

H.B.U.G.M. Wimalasiri, Department of Zoology, University of Sri Jayewardenepura, Sri Lanka

Department of Zoology, University of Sri Jayewardenepura, Sri Lanka

Downloads

Published

2017-08-14

Issue

Section

Biodiversity Conservation and Management