Fisheries ecology in the interface zone of Lake Nabugabo

This study was carried out in the interface zone of Lake Nabugabo, which is situated to the west of Lake Victoria. Four study sites were chosen from the south-western to the eastern ends of the euhydrophyte-dominated interface zone, which was about 10 km long, 10 to 50 m wide, 2 m deep and characterized by a thick layer of peat at the bottom. Nymphaea caerulea was the most dominant and widespread euhydrophyte species except in the eastern tip of the lake where it was replaced by Nymphaea lotus. Interspersed among these lilies was Ceratophyllum demersum in certain bays which were thought to be either water inlets or out-flows; Utricularia and Nymphoides indica were associated with monospecific stand of N. caerulea in the south- western end of the zone.The microinvertebrates were dominated by Copepoda (represented mainly by Cyclopoida), and Rotifera, with Cladocera occurring sporadically, while the macroinvertebrates were represented by Mollusca, Acarina, and seven insect orders of which Diptera (represented by Chironomidae) was the most dominant and widespread. Snails were found to have increased in abundance and distribution since the early 1960's. Nymphaea-Ceratophyllum mixed habitats had far more larval fishes and macroinvertebrates than monospecific stands of N. caerulea. Generally, the eastern end of the interface zone had more macroinvertebrates and larval fishes than the south-western end. Food habits of larval fishes were dominated by chironomid larvae; others consumed included detritus, aufwuchs and, periodically, cladocerans.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kateyo, E.M.
Other Authors: Busulwa, H.
Format: book_section biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Wetlands Inspection Division 2005
Subjects:Environment, Fisheries, Limnology,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/35586
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-355862021-07-12T02:05:10Z Fisheries ecology in the interface zone of Lake Nabugabo A compilation of scientific information on Nabugabo Ramsar Site, Uganda Kateyo, E.M. Busulwa, H. Mafabi, P.G. Ndawula, L.M. Environment Fisheries Limnology This study was carried out in the interface zone of Lake Nabugabo, which is situated to the west of Lake Victoria. Four study sites were chosen from the south-western to the eastern ends of the euhydrophyte-dominated interface zone, which was about 10 km long, 10 to 50 m wide, 2 m deep and characterized by a thick layer of peat at the bottom. Nymphaea caerulea was the most dominant and widespread euhydrophyte species except in the eastern tip of the lake where it was replaced by Nymphaea lotus. Interspersed among these lilies was Ceratophyllum demersum in certain bays which were thought to be either water inlets or out-flows; Utricularia and Nymphoides indica were associated with monospecific stand of N. caerulea in the south- western end of the zone.The microinvertebrates were dominated by Copepoda (represented mainly by Cyclopoida), and Rotifera, with Cladocera occurring sporadically, while the macroinvertebrates were represented by Mollusca, Acarina, and seven insect orders of which Diptera (represented by Chironomidae) was the most dominant and widespread. Snails were found to have increased in abundance and distribution since the early 1960's. Nymphaea-Ceratophyllum mixed habitats had far more larval fishes and macroinvertebrates than monospecific stands of N. caerulea. Generally, the eastern end of the interface zone had more macroinvertebrates and larval fishes than the south-western end. Food habits of larval fishes were dominated by chironomid larvae; others consumed included detritus, aufwuchs and, periodically, cladocerans. Lake Victoria Environment Management Project (LVEMP) 2021-06-24T17:50:49Z 2021-06-24T17:50:49Z 2005 book_section 9970-067-00-1 http://hdl.handle.net/1834/35586 en application/pdf application/pdf 31-45 196 Wetlands Inspection Division Kampala, Uganda http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/20707 4230 2016-06-01 14:35:31 20707 National Fisheries Resources Research Institute, Uganda
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 Environment
Fisheries
Limnology
Environment
Fisheries
Limnology
spellingShingle Environment
Fisheries
Limnology
Environment
Fisheries
Limnology
Kateyo, E.M.
Fisheries ecology in the interface zone of Lake Nabugabo
description This study was carried out in the interface zone of Lake Nabugabo, which is situated to the west of Lake Victoria. Four study sites were chosen from the south-western to the eastern ends of the euhydrophyte-dominated interface zone, which was about 10 km long, 10 to 50 m wide, 2 m deep and characterized by a thick layer of peat at the bottom. Nymphaea caerulea was the most dominant and widespread euhydrophyte species except in the eastern tip of the lake where it was replaced by Nymphaea lotus. Interspersed among these lilies was Ceratophyllum demersum in certain bays which were thought to be either water inlets or out-flows; Utricularia and Nymphoides indica were associated with monospecific stand of N. caerulea in the south- western end of the zone.The microinvertebrates were dominated by Copepoda (represented mainly by Cyclopoida), and Rotifera, with Cladocera occurring sporadically, while the macroinvertebrates were represented by Mollusca, Acarina, and seven insect orders of which Diptera (represented by Chironomidae) was the most dominant and widespread. Snails were found to have increased in abundance and distribution since the early 1960's. Nymphaea-Ceratophyllum mixed habitats had far more larval fishes and macroinvertebrates than monospecific stands of N. caerulea. Generally, the eastern end of the interface zone had more macroinvertebrates and larval fishes than the south-western end. Food habits of larval fishes were dominated by chironomid larvae; others consumed included detritus, aufwuchs and, periodically, cladocerans.
author2 Busulwa, H.
author_facet Busulwa, H.
Kateyo, E.M.
format book_section
topic_facet Environment
Fisheries
Limnology
author Kateyo, E.M.
author_sort Kateyo, E.M.
title Fisheries ecology in the interface zone of Lake Nabugabo
title_short Fisheries ecology in the interface zone of Lake Nabugabo
title_full Fisheries ecology in the interface zone of Lake Nabugabo
title_fullStr Fisheries ecology in the interface zone of Lake Nabugabo
title_full_unstemmed Fisheries ecology in the interface zone of Lake Nabugabo
title_sort fisheries ecology in the interface zone of lake nabugabo
publisher Wetlands Inspection Division
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/35586
work_keys_str_mv AT kateyoem fisheriesecologyintheinterfacezoneoflakenabugabo
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