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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 6605

Jukka Sarkka; The occurrence of oligochaetes in lake chains receiving pulp mill waste and their relation to eutrophication on the trophic scale. Hydrobiologia 155:259-266, 1987

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Earlier conceptions of oligochaetes as indicators of trophy were somewhat enlarged to include more littoral, meiofaunal and naidid species. The amplitudes of different species on the oligotrophy-eutrophy axis seem to be generally large. Certain species which probably originally occur mainly in very humic environments seem also to be able to endure very strong organic loading caused by pulp mills. Species of this kind seem to be Dero digitata, Specaria josinae, Slavina appendiculata and Aulodrilus pluriseta. Chaetogaster langi and Arcteonais lomondi are also species which live in areas receiving pulp mill wastes. A. lomondi and D. digitata seem to be species living in greater depths than the naidids generally. Tubifex tubifex densities as high as 600 000 ind./m2 were found near a pulp mill when the meiofauna method was used. A third of the T. tubifex were found deeper than 5 cm from the sediment surface. S. josinae and S. appendiculata may be found down to depths between 5 and 10 cm.