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Article
Fytoplankton uit het Tanganyika-meer en Cholera
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Year: 2013

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Article
Silicon isotopic fractionation in Lake Tanganyika and its main tributaries

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Article
Seasonal and spatial variability in the abundance of auto- and heterotrophic plankton in Lake Tanganyika

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This study aims to evaluate the seasonal and interannual variability in the importance of the microbial food web in Lake Tanganyika. Phytoplankton, bacteria and protozoa (heterotrophic nanoflagellates and ciliates) were monitored at two contrasting pelagic sites (Kigoma and Mpulungu) during 3 consecutive years. In addition, spatial variation was studied along 3 north-south transects during contrasting seasons. The study period covered a wide range of limnological conditions, with mixing depth ranging from 13 to >100 m and euphotic depth from 14 to 65 m. The consistently high bacterial biomass (up to 62 µg C l-1) and the high contribution of small phytoplankton (<5 µm) to total phytoplankton biomass (on average 50 % in Kigoma and 84 % in Mpulungu) point to an important role of the microbial food web in the lake throughout the year. Total phytoplankton biomass increased during periods of low water column stability, with an increased biomass of small eukaryotic phytoplankton (2 to 5 µm) at both stations, together with autotrophic prokaryotic picoplankton at the southern station Mpulungu and diatoms at the northern station Kigoma. Heterotrophic bacteria, heterotrophic nanoflagellates (0.06 to 11.01 µg C l-1) and ciliates (up to 8.16 µm C l-1) did not show this seasonality. The main seasonal and spatial variability in the importance of the microbial food web seems therefore primarily linked to the contribution of the small phytoplankton, which may be better adapted to lower average light intensities and higher N:P ratios during periods of deep mixing


Article
Changes in phytoplankton and bacterial biodiversity linked to hydrodynamics in Lake Tanganyika

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Observations on the limnology and phytoplankton community of crater Lake Kyaninga (Uganda), with special attention to its diatom flora

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The water column of Lake Kyaninga is permanently stratified (meromictic) below 100 m depth. Above this depth, mixing frequency varies from daily (down to 8-12 m depth) over at least once per year (down to 39-47 m depth), to once in several years or decades (between 39-47 and ca. 100 m depth).Nutrient and chlorophyll concentrations as well as phytoplankton data classify the lake as low in aquatic productivity (oligotrophic). Its pelagic, open-water phytoplankton community is dominated by Cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) and Chlorophyta (green algae). Bacillariophyta (diatoms) contribute only a minor part of total phytoplankton biomass in both wet and dry seasons, and are characterized by an assemblage of small Nitzschia species. Epiphytic and epipelic diatoms are relatively few, because steep rocky crater slopes limit the littoral zone even though water-column transparency is hugh. The composition of recently deposited diatom assemblages preserved in offshore surface sediments gives a good, annually integrated representation of the present-day pelagic diatom community. The documented species richness of the diatom flora of Lake Kyaninga is moderate with about 150 taxa. Only ca. 17% of these are biogeographically restricted to tropical Africa; and most of these belong to the genus Nitzschia.


Article
Climate variability as recorded in Lake Tanganyika (CLIMLAKE)

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Article
Bacterial community composition in Lake Tanganyika : Vertical and horizontal heterogeneity

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Limnological variability and pelagic fish abundance (Stolothrissa tanganicae and Lates stappersii) in Lake Tanganyika

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The abundance of two main pelagic fish species in Lake Tanganyika (Stolothrissa tanganicae and Lates stappersii) has always been observed to fluctuate considerably at different time scales. The inverse correlation between the abundance of these species has often been interpreted as the consequence of predator-prey relations (avoidance behaviour by the prey). However, currently the two species often appear spatially segregated in the lake, S. tanganicae dominating in the north while L. sappesii is generally abudant in the south wehre it feeds mostly on shrimps. A fluctuating abundance of the species is nevertheless observed. As these fish species ahve a major importance for the fisheries, we investigated the limnological variability in relation to the short-term variability of fish catches. (cont.)


Article
CHOLTIC : Épidémies de choléra au lac Tanganyka introduites par les changements climatiques ?

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CHOLTIC : Cholera-epidemieën in het Tanganykameer veroorzaakt door klimaatveranderingen ?

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