Benthic assemblages for ecological evaluation of Lake Manzala, Mediterranean Sea, ‎Egypt.

Lake Manzalah one of the northern Nile Delta in Egypt is the largest lake, which lies ‎between the lakes Borollus and Bardaweel and connects to the Mediterranean Sea. It ‎has an area of current 250 thousand acres. It contains many islands particularly along ‎the south-western region forming of semi-enclosed basins and it is characterized by dense ‎submerged hydrophytes as Pomatogeton pectinals; Ceratophyllum demersum and ‎floating hyacinth Eichhornia crassipes. Seven major drains are loading directly in the ‎south to the west. Lake Manzalah-bottomed shallow (0.5-1m), brackish water (3-18‰ ‎and is suffering from the phenomenon of high nutrition (eutrophication) due to increased ‎rates of nutrients and organic matter. So some sources of wastes discharges such as ‎sewage and industrial waste and agricultural activity pour directly into the lake, ‎especially the southern region (Bahr El Baqar Drain). The study aims to study the ‎distribution of benthic organisms in the lake and knowledge of the relationship between ‎the types and aggregates benthic food ecosystem as the important food sources' for ‎some aquatic organisms, especially economic fish and crustaceans in study stations. ‎Bottom sediment samples were collected from 11 sites by grab sampler covering ‎different environments lake and from 4 drains consists mostly of organic materials ‎‎(sludge) is made up of waste sewage, industrial, agricultural waste plants, and calcareous ‎shells empty. Results indicate for examining configuration qualitative macro benthic ‎recording the 16 species of aquatic plants and invertebrates where empty calcareous ‎shells were more frequent. The abundance of macrobenthic organisms at different ‎sampling sites along Lake Manzala can be ranked as follows: Ostracoda (45.4%, 1010 ‎ind/m2) > submerged plants (12.9%, 287 tufts/m2) > Amphipoda (9.2%, 207 ind ∕m2) > ‎Polychaetes (7%, 110 ind ∕m2) Bivalves (5.9%, 132 ind ∕m2). The biomass of benthic ‎assemblages at different sampling sites can also be ranked as follows: at ST5 (18.1%, ‎‎4433 ind ∕m2) > St6 (11.3%, 2772 ind ∕m2) > ST8 (9.8%, 2405 ind ∕m2) > ST3 (9.2%, 2247) ‎‎> ST7 (8.7%, 2122 ind ∕m2). The biomass of benthic assemblages at different sampling ‎sites can also be ranked as follows: echinoderms (52%) > molluscs (27%) > crustaceans ‎‎(16%) > polychaetes (2%) > other groups (3%). Due to the increase of pollutants ‎extensively loaded into the drains are the possible factors having affecting the ‎constituents’ structures of benthos. Sites of sampling study were evenly spread (J’ > 0.8) ‎only at sites 6 and 8, moderate diversity (H’ > 1.00) was at most sites and show lower ‎value at sites 3 and 11 and 0 at site 1. The abiotic environmental effects in the lake are ‎general to those generally observed in other areas influenced by organic wastes, namely, ‎changes in the physic-chemical properties of the sediments and low oxygen ‎concentrations in the bottom water due to the decomposition of organic materials.‎

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Main Author: El Komi, Mohamed Mohamed
Format: Journal Contribution biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2021-06-30
Subjects:benthic assemblages‎, environmental evaluation, biodiversity, dominance species, Lake Manzala, ASFA_2015::E::Ecology, ASFA_2015::Environment, ASFA_2015::B::Biodiversity,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/41431
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-414312021-08-24T01:56:14Z Benthic assemblages for ecological evaluation of Lake Manzala, Mediterranean Sea, ‎Egypt. El Komi, Mohamed Mohamed benthic assemblages‎ environmental evaluation biodiversity dominance species Lake Manzala ASFA_2015::E::Ecology ASFA_2015::Environment ASFA_2015::B::Biodiversity Lake Manzalah one of the northern Nile Delta in Egypt is the largest lake, which lies ‎between the lakes Borollus and Bardaweel and connects to the Mediterranean Sea. It ‎has an area of current 250 thousand acres. It contains many islands particularly along ‎the south-western region forming of semi-enclosed basins and it is characterized by dense ‎submerged hydrophytes as Pomatogeton pectinals; Ceratophyllum demersum and ‎floating hyacinth Eichhornia crassipes. Seven major drains are loading directly in the ‎south to the west. Lake Manzalah-bottomed shallow (0.5-1m), brackish water (3-18‰ ‎and is suffering from the phenomenon of high nutrition (eutrophication) due to increased ‎rates of nutrients and organic matter. So some sources of wastes discharges such as ‎sewage and industrial waste and agricultural activity pour directly into the lake, ‎especially the southern region (Bahr El Baqar Drain). The study aims to study the ‎distribution of benthic organisms in the lake and knowledge of the relationship between ‎the types and aggregates benthic food ecosystem as the important food sources' for ‎some aquatic organisms, especially economic fish and crustaceans in study stations. ‎Bottom sediment samples were collected from 11 sites by grab sampler covering ‎different environments lake and from 4 drains consists mostly of organic materials ‎‎(sludge) is made up of waste sewage, industrial, agricultural waste plants, and calcareous ‎shells empty. Results indicate for examining configuration qualitative macro benthic ‎recording the 16 species of aquatic plants and invertebrates where empty calcareous ‎shells were more frequent. The abundance of macrobenthic organisms at different ‎sampling sites along Lake Manzala can be ranked as follows: Ostracoda (45.4%, 1010 ‎ind/m2) > submerged plants (12.9%, 287 tufts/m2) > Amphipoda (9.2%, 207 ind ∕m2) > ‎Polychaetes (7%, 110 ind ∕m2) Bivalves (5.9%, 132 ind ∕m2). The biomass of benthic ‎assemblages at different sampling sites can also be ranked as follows: at ST5 (18.1%, ‎‎4433 ind ∕m2) > St6 (11.3%, 2772 ind ∕m2) > ST8 (9.8%, 2405 ind ∕m2) > ST3 (9.2%, 2247) ‎‎> ST7 (8.7%, 2122 ind ∕m2). The biomass of benthic assemblages at different sampling ‎sites can also be ranked as follows: echinoderms (52%) > molluscs (27%) > crustaceans ‎‎(16%) > polychaetes (2%) > other groups (3%). Due to the increase of pollutants ‎extensively loaded into the drains are the possible factors having affecting the ‎constituents’ structures of benthos. Sites of sampling study were evenly spread (J’ > 0.8) ‎only at sites 6 and 8, moderate diversity (H’ > 1.00) was at most sites and show lower ‎value at sites 3 and 11 and 0 at site 1. The abiotic environmental effects in the lake are ‎general to those generally observed in other areas influenced by organic wastes, namely, ‎changes in the physic-chemical properties of the sediments and low oxygen ‎concentrations in the bottom water due to the decomposition of organic materials.‎ Published Refereed 2021-08-23T12:57:54Z 2021-08-23T12:57:54Z 2021-06-30 Journal Contribution http://hdl.handle.net/1834/41431 en https://www.pakjmsuok.com Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ 43-75
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic benthic assemblages‎
environmental evaluation
biodiversity
dominance species
Lake Manzala
ASFA_2015::E::Ecology
ASFA_2015::Environment
ASFA_2015::B::Biodiversity
benthic assemblages‎
environmental evaluation
biodiversity
dominance species
Lake Manzala
ASFA_2015::E::Ecology
ASFA_2015::Environment
ASFA_2015::B::Biodiversity
spellingShingle benthic assemblages‎
environmental evaluation
biodiversity
dominance species
Lake Manzala
ASFA_2015::E::Ecology
ASFA_2015::Environment
ASFA_2015::B::Biodiversity
benthic assemblages‎
environmental evaluation
biodiversity
dominance species
Lake Manzala
ASFA_2015::E::Ecology
ASFA_2015::Environment
ASFA_2015::B::Biodiversity
El Komi, Mohamed Mohamed
Benthic assemblages for ecological evaluation of Lake Manzala, Mediterranean Sea, ‎Egypt.
description Lake Manzalah one of the northern Nile Delta in Egypt is the largest lake, which lies ‎between the lakes Borollus and Bardaweel and connects to the Mediterranean Sea. It ‎has an area of current 250 thousand acres. It contains many islands particularly along ‎the south-western region forming of semi-enclosed basins and it is characterized by dense ‎submerged hydrophytes as Pomatogeton pectinals; Ceratophyllum demersum and ‎floating hyacinth Eichhornia crassipes. Seven major drains are loading directly in the ‎south to the west. Lake Manzalah-bottomed shallow (0.5-1m), brackish water (3-18‰ ‎and is suffering from the phenomenon of high nutrition (eutrophication) due to increased ‎rates of nutrients and organic matter. So some sources of wastes discharges such as ‎sewage and industrial waste and agricultural activity pour directly into the lake, ‎especially the southern region (Bahr El Baqar Drain). The study aims to study the ‎distribution of benthic organisms in the lake and knowledge of the relationship between ‎the types and aggregates benthic food ecosystem as the important food sources' for ‎some aquatic organisms, especially economic fish and crustaceans in study stations. ‎Bottom sediment samples were collected from 11 sites by grab sampler covering ‎different environments lake and from 4 drains consists mostly of organic materials ‎‎(sludge) is made up of waste sewage, industrial, agricultural waste plants, and calcareous ‎shells empty. Results indicate for examining configuration qualitative macro benthic ‎recording the 16 species of aquatic plants and invertebrates where empty calcareous ‎shells were more frequent. The abundance of macrobenthic organisms at different ‎sampling sites along Lake Manzala can be ranked as follows: Ostracoda (45.4%, 1010 ‎ind/m2) > submerged plants (12.9%, 287 tufts/m2) > Amphipoda (9.2%, 207 ind ∕m2) > ‎Polychaetes (7%, 110 ind ∕m2) Bivalves (5.9%, 132 ind ∕m2). The biomass of benthic ‎assemblages at different sampling sites can also be ranked as follows: at ST5 (18.1%, ‎‎4433 ind ∕m2) > St6 (11.3%, 2772 ind ∕m2) > ST8 (9.8%, 2405 ind ∕m2) > ST3 (9.2%, 2247) ‎‎> ST7 (8.7%, 2122 ind ∕m2). The biomass of benthic assemblages at different sampling ‎sites can also be ranked as follows: echinoderms (52%) > molluscs (27%) > crustaceans ‎‎(16%) > polychaetes (2%) > other groups (3%). Due to the increase of pollutants ‎extensively loaded into the drains are the possible factors having affecting the ‎constituents’ structures of benthos. Sites of sampling study were evenly spread (J’ > 0.8) ‎only at sites 6 and 8, moderate diversity (H’ > 1.00) was at most sites and show lower ‎value at sites 3 and 11 and 0 at site 1. The abiotic environmental effects in the lake are ‎general to those generally observed in other areas influenced by organic wastes, namely, ‎changes in the physic-chemical properties of the sediments and low oxygen ‎concentrations in the bottom water due to the decomposition of organic materials.‎
format Journal Contribution
topic_facet benthic assemblages‎
environmental evaluation
biodiversity
dominance species
Lake Manzala
ASFA_2015::E::Ecology
ASFA_2015::Environment
ASFA_2015::B::Biodiversity
author El Komi, Mohamed Mohamed
author_facet El Komi, Mohamed Mohamed
author_sort El Komi, Mohamed Mohamed
title Benthic assemblages for ecological evaluation of Lake Manzala, Mediterranean Sea, ‎Egypt.
title_short Benthic assemblages for ecological evaluation of Lake Manzala, Mediterranean Sea, ‎Egypt.
title_full Benthic assemblages for ecological evaluation of Lake Manzala, Mediterranean Sea, ‎Egypt.
title_fullStr Benthic assemblages for ecological evaluation of Lake Manzala, Mediterranean Sea, ‎Egypt.
title_full_unstemmed Benthic assemblages for ecological evaluation of Lake Manzala, Mediterranean Sea, ‎Egypt.
title_sort benthic assemblages for ecological evaluation of lake manzala, mediterranean sea, ‎egypt.
publishDate 2021-06-30
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/41431
work_keys_str_mv AT elkomimohamedmohamed benthicassemblagesforecologicalevaluationoflakemanzalamediterraneanseaegypt
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