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The nematode fauna of the Murray River estuary, South Australia; the effects of the barrages across its mouth

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Abstract

The littoral nematode fauna of the Murray River, South Australia, above and below the barrages that control the outflow of the river into the Southern Ocean has been investigated by taking cores of the sediment at monthly intervals for one year. Samples of river water were taken at the same time for chemical analysis and sediment particle size has also been investigated.

At two sites below the barrages the salinity varied depending on the volume of water discharged through the barrages. It rose almost to that of sea water while they remained closed, but fell to that of the river water when they were all open and discharging large volumes of river water. The nematode population fluctuated from about 12 200 to 180 000 m-2 for nine months, but the numbers of live nematodes fell sharply in July through to September, accompanied by heavy nematode mortality, reaching 100% at one site in August. We attribute the mortality to a prolonged discharge of river water. More than 40 genera have been identified, most with cosmopolitan distributions.

Above the barrages, at Mundoo and on Lake Alexandrina the water is fresh river water. The fauna was less dense than that below the barrages; with a maximum of 10000 m-2. It comprised genera typical of freshwaters overseas (no comparable studies of Australian freshwater nematodes have been reported), such as Eutobrilus, Tripyla and Ironus, together with two species from typical marine genera, i.e. Mesacanthion and Enoploides. The latter species is very similar to E. fuviatilis from the Volga river.

It is suggested that low population density below the barrages, when compared with other estuaries, reflects periodic mortality in estuarine nematodes when salinity falls drastically, whilst above the barrages there is a mixture of tolerant estuarine and typical freshwater nematodes.

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Nicholas, W.L., Bird, A.F., Beech, T.A. et al. The nematode fauna of the Murray River estuary, South Australia; the effects of the barrages across its mouth. Hydrobiologia 234, 87–101 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00010864

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