Article

Article name ZOOBENTHOS IN WATERCOURSES AND WATER BODIES IN THE BOLONSKY STATE NATURE RESERVE (RUSSIA)
Authors

Nadezhda M. Yavorskaya, Institute for Water and Ecological Problems FEB RAS (680000, Russia, Khabarovsky Krai, Khabarovsk, Dikopoltseva Street, 56); Joint Directorate of State Natural Reserves and National Parks of Khabarovsk Territory (Khabarovsk, Russia); e-mail: yavorskaya@ivep.as.khb.ru

Reference to article

Yavorskaya N.M. 2019. Zoobenthos in watercourses and water bodies in the Bolonsky State Nature Reserve (Russia). Nature Conservation Research 5(2): 64–79. https://dx.doi.org/10.24189/ncr.2020.017

Electronic Supplement. Taxonomic list of the bottom invertebrates in water bodies in the Bolonsky State Nature Reserve (Link).

Section Research articles
DOI https://dx.doi.org/10.24189/ncr.2020.017
Abstract

Invertebrates play a major role in food chains, being the main feed stock for many vertebrates. So far, the benthic fauna communities are still poorly studied in many water body types, including wetlands in the River Amur basin. In 2015–2018, we conducted for the first time the study of zoobenthos in water bodies located in the Bolonsky State Nature Reserve (Khabarovsky Krai, Russia). We present data on the general taxonomic composition and occurrence of benthic invertebrates in rivers and lakes. In addition, information on the structure, density and biomass of their populations is provided. The environmental assessment of the water bodies of the Protected Area has been performed on the basis of zoobenthos composition. Quantitative samples of benthos were collected using the GR-91 rod bottom scoop from a depth from 50 cm to 400 cm and using the folding benthometer until a 25-cm depth. All sampled were fixed in a 4% formalin solution. Amphibiotic insect adults were collected using an entomological net and light traps. These samples were fixed in a 75–96% ethanol solution and processed according to the generally accepted methods. A total of 168 taxa from 15 systematic hydrobiont groups were recorded. The majority of them were Chironomidae (87 species), Trichoptera (18 species) and Ephemeroptera (16 species). Quantitative indicators of organisms were correlated with the seasonal fluctuations in the hydrological regime and the soil type. During floods, the quantitative sampling of zoobenthos was impossible. During a low-water period, studies were available predominantly in small and medium rivers and channels in which entry by boat is possible. In lakes, we found low quantitative values of density and biomass of benthos (297 ± 91 individuals/m2 and 0.1 ± 0.1 g/m2). The average values of density and biomass were respectively 824 ± 267 individuals/m2 and 8.6 ± 8.1 g/m2 in streams, 1298 ± 538 individuals/m2 and 11.2 ± 5.8 g/m2 in small rivers, and 473 ± 76 individuals/m2, and 23.3 ± 9.7 g/m2 in medium rivers. Clean sand was the poorest soil in lakes and rivers. In areas with a slowed flow in springs and channels, the presence of silty-sandy soils with an admixture of detritus provides a higher number of habitats suitable for the aquatic organisms in contrast to the main riverbeds of lowlands. We demonstrated that in water bodies, the conditions favourable for the benthic communities are observed on plant root systems immersed in water along riverbeds, in channels and bays, and on silty sands with a rich admixture of detritus at an average depth of 1.7 m. The density and biomass of zoobenthos varied from 6 individuals/m2 to 25 110 individuals/m2 and from < 0.1 g/m2 to 11 81.9 g/m2. The average density of benthic populations was 692 ± 119 individuals/m2 and the average biomass – 16.9 ± 5.8 g/m2. High values of benthos density were recorded in the summer period, while high values of the benthos biomass was observed in the spring period. During the vegetative seasons, Chironomidae, Oligochaeta, Mollusca, and Trichoptera dominated in the zoobenthos composition. This is related with their life cycles and the influence of various abiotic factors (floods, current velocity, water temperature, oxygen regime, soil nature). We found that the proportion of Mollusca was 89% of the total zoobenthos biomass, while proportions of Oligochaeta and Chironomidae were respectively 60% and 26% of the total density. Higher values of the occurrence frequency were demonstrated for Chironomidae (100%) and Oligochaeta (95%). Hydra, Planaria, aquatic mites, Asellidae, Odonata, black flies, Ephydridae, and Coleoptera were rarely recorded (< 10%). Permanent components of the benthic communities were eurybionts and limnobionts belonging to Chironomidae, Oligochaeta and Nematoda, which inhabit preferably channels and sites with a slowed current velocity, namely lakes and mires. The absence of oxyphilic species of Plecoptera, Deuterophlebiidae, and Blephariceridae was characteristic. This is comparable with wetlands around the world. The most interesting records were Amuranodonta boloniensis and Cristaria herculea included in the various-rank Red Data Books, as well as Monodiamesa kamora known only in the Lower Amur River basin. Two Chironomidae species, Heterotrissocladius simmiensis, Propsilocerus amurensis, have been described for science for the first time on the basis of samples collected in the Bolonsky State Nature Reserve. Finally, Axarus fundorum is a new species in the Russian fauna. According to biological indication data, the water bodies of the Bolonsky State Nature Reserve belong to a clean type. They are characterised by high environmental status and meet the requirements of the European Framework Water Directive (WFD), which is required to create a network of reference targets. The presence of new and threatened species indicates the uniqueness of the wetlands in the Lake Bolon neighbourhood and the need for their conservation and further investigations.

Keywords

biomass, bottom invertebrates, community structure, diversity, environmental status, population density, Protected Area, River Amur basin, seasonal dynamics, wetlands

Artice information

Received: 21.10.2019. Revised: 22.03.2020. Accepted: 10.04.2020.

The full text of the article
References

Balushkina E.V. 2009. Assessment of the Neva Estuary ecosystem state on the basis of structural characteristics of benthic animal communities in 1994–2005. Inland Water Biology 2(4): 355–363. DOI: 10.1134/S1995082909040105
Batzer D.P., Boix D. 2016. An introduction to freshwater wetlands and their invertebrates. In: D.P. Batzer, D. Boix (Eds.): Invertebrates in Freshwater Wetlands: An International Perspective on Their Ecology. New York: Springer. P. 1–24.
Bazarova B.B., Itigilova M.T., Dulmaa A., Matafonov P.V., Tsybekmitova G.T., Tashlykova N.A., Afonina E.Y., Ayushsuren C. 2017. Diversity of communities and quantitative parameters of hydrobionts in lakes of the Onon-Toreisk Plain. Biology Bulletin 2: 193–202. DOI: 10.1134/S1062359016060030
Bezmaternykh D.M. 2007. Zoobenthos as an indicator of water ecosystems' state in Western Siberia. Vol. 85. Novosibirsk. 87 p. [In Russian]
Bogatov V.V. 1994. Ecology of river communities of the Russian Far East. Vladivostok: Dalnauka, 218 p. [In Russian]
Bogatov V.V., Fedorovskiy A.S. 2017. Basics of river hydrology and hydrobiology. Vladivostok: Dalnauka. 384 p. [In Russian]
Borutsky E.V., Klyuchareva O.A., Nikolsky G.V. 1952. Bottom invertebrates (zoobenthos) of Amur and their role in feeding Amur fishes. In: Proceedings of the Amur ichthyological expedition of 1945–1949. Vol. 3. Moscow: Publication of the Moscow Society of Naturalists. P. 5–139. [In Russian]
Chernova O.A. 1952. Mayflies (Ephemeroptera) in the Amur River basin and adjacent waters and their role in Amur fish feeding. In: Proceedings of the Amur ichthyological expedition of 1945–1949. Vol. 3. Moscow: Publication of the Moscow Society of Naturalists. P. 229–360. [In Russian]
Ivicheva K.N., Philippov D.A. 2017. Aquatic macroinvertebrates of raised bogs in the central part of the Vologda region, Russia. Transactions of KarRC RAS 9: 30–45. DOI: 10.17076/eco472 [In Russian]
Kitaev S.P. 2007. Limnology basics for hydrobiologists and ichthyologists. Petrozavodsk: KSC RAS. 395 p. [In Russian]
Klyuchareva O.A. 1952. Trichoptera larvae in the Amur river basin and their role in fish nutrition. In: Proceedings of the Amur ichthyological expedition of 1945–1949. Vol. 3. Moscow: Publication of the Moscow Society of Naturalists. P. 361–380. [In Russian]
Konstantinov A.S. 1950. Chironomids basin. Amur and their role in feeding Amur fish. In: Proceedings of the Amur ichthyological expedition of 1945–1949. Vol. 3. Moscow: Publication of the Moscow Society of Naturalists. P. 147–286. [In Russian]
Konstantinov A.S. 1979. General Hydrobiology. Moscow: Vysshaya Shkola. 480 p. [In Russian]
Kuklin A.P., Tsybekmitova G.T., Gorlacheva E.P. 2013. State of lake ecosystems in Onon-Torei plain in 1983–2011 (Eastern Transbaikalia). Arid Ecosystems 3(3): 122–130. DOI: 10.1134/S2079096113030062
Leley A.S. (Ed.). 2006. Key to the insects of Russian Far East. Diptera and Siphonaptera. Vol. 6. Part 4. Vladivostok. Dalnauka. 936 p. [In Russian]
Levanidov V.Ya. 1977. Biomass and structure of benthic biocenoses in the River Kedrovaya. In: V.Ya. Levanidov, I.M. Levanidova, E.A. Makarchenko (Eds.): Freshwater fauna in the Kedrovaya Pad Reserve. Vol. 45(148). Vladivostok: FESC AS USSR. P. 126–159. [In Russian]
Lukin E.I. 1962. Diagnostic features of the leech fauna in the Amur river basin. Izvestiya TINRO 48: 195–202. [In Russian]
Makarchenko E.A., Makarchenko M.A. 2009. Propsilocerus amurensis sp.n. (Diptera, Chironomidae, Orthocladiinae) from Amur River basin (Russian Far East). Euroasian Entomological Journal 8(2): 261–263.
Makarchenko E.A., Makarchenko M.A., Zorina O.V., Yavorskaya N.M. 2008. Preliminary data on chironomid fauna (Diptera, Chironomidae) in the Amur river basin. In: E.A. Makarchenko, V.V. Bogatov, L.A. Medvedeva, T.M. Tiunova, S.Yu. Storozhenko (Eds.): Freshwater ecosystems in the Amur River basin. Vladivostok: Dalnauka. P. 187–208. [In Russian]
Makarchenko E.A., Velyaev O.A., Yavorskaya N.M. 2018. Morphological redescription and DNA barcoding of Monodiamesa kamora Makarchenko et Yavorskaya (Diptera: Chironomidae) from the Amur river basin (Russian FAR EAST). Far Eastern Entomologist 359: 1–8. DOI: 10.25221/fee.350.1
Mikulich L.V. 1948. Experience in quantitative accounting of benthos and plankton in part of the Amur riverbed and some floodplain water bodies. Izvestiya TINRO 27: 139–164. [In Russian]
Mirzaei M., Khovand H. 2015. Prevalence of Argulus foliaceus in ornamental fishes [goldfish (Carassius auratus) and Koi (Cyprinus carpio)] in Kerman, southeast of Iran. Journal of Parasitic Diseases 39(4): 780–782. DOI: 10.1007/s12639-013-0406-2
Prozorova L.А., Makarenko V.P., Balan I.V. 2014а. Distribution of Gastropods Viviparoidea (Caenogastropoda, Architaenioglossa) in the Amur river basin. In: E.A. Makarchenko, V.V. Bogatov, T.M. Tiunova, V.A. Teslenko, L.A. Medvedeva (Eds.): V.Ya. Levanidov's Biennial Memorial Meetings (19–21 March, 2014). Vol. 6. Vladivostok: Dalnauka. P. 543–551. [In Russian]
Prozorova L.А., Makarenko V.P., Sitnikova T.Ya. 2014b. Mollusks of the genus Parafossarulus (Caenogastropoda, Rissooidea, Bithyniidae) in the Amur river basin. In: E.A. Makarchenko, V.V. Bogatov, T.M. Tiunova, V.A. Teslenko, L.A. Medvedeva (Eds.): V.Ya. Levanidov's Biennial Memorial Meetings (19–21 March, 2014). Vol. 6. Vladivostok: Dalnauka. P. 552–560. [In Russian]
Rozenberg G.S., Zinchenko T.D. 2011. Conclusion. In: Small rivers in the Volga basin: freshwater ecosystems characteristics. Togliatti: Kassandra. P. 250–252. [In Russian]
Semenchenko V.P. 2004. The Principles and system of bioindication of fluid water. Minsk: Orekh. 125 p. [In Russian]
Semykina G.I. 2006. The review of the condition and pollution of Khanka Lake by materials of the State monitoring network of environmental pollution. In: Yu.N. Glushchenko, V.V. Gerstein (Eds.): Conservation problems for wetlands of international value: Khanka Lake (10–11 June, 2006). Vladivostok: Ideya. P. 190–200. [In Russian]
Smirenskiy S.M., Smirenskaya E.M. (Eds.). 2016. Giltchin river watershed. History. Wetlands. Water resources. Vladivostok: Dalnauka. 204 p. [In Russian]
Sokolov I.I. 1950. Water mites (Hydrachnellae) from the collection of the Amur ichthyological expedition 1945–1949. In: Proceedings of the Amur ichthyological expedition of 1945–1949. Vol. 1. Moscow: Publication of the Moscow Society of Naturalists. P. 375–378. [In Russian]
Sokolskaya N.L. 1958. Freshwater small-necked worms in the Amur river basin. In: Proceedings of the Amur ichthyological expedition of 1945–1949. Vol. 4. Moscow: Publishing House of Moscow State University. P. 287–358. [In Russian]
Tarasova O.G., Zaitsev V.F. 2015. Current state of benthic fauna and water quality assessment in channels of the Volga river delta. South of Russia: ecology, development 10(4): 69–75. [In Russian]
Tiunova T.M. (Ed.). 2003. Guidelines for the collection and determination of zoobenthos in hydrobiological studies of watercourses in the Russian Far East. Moscow: VNIRO Publishing House. 95 p. [In Russian]
Tiunova T.M., Gorovaya E.A. 2011. Fauna of mayflies (Insecta, Ephemeroptera) in the Lower Amur River and its left-bank tributaries. In: E.A. Makarchenko, V.V. Bogatov, T.M. Tiunova, L.A. Medvedeva (Eds.): V.Ya. Levanidov's Biennial Memorial Meetings (21–23 March, 2011). Vol. 5. Vladivostok: Dalnauka. P. 522–539. [In Russian]
Tiunova T.M., Teslenko V.A., Yavorskaya N.M., Makarchenko M.A., Shesterkin V.P. 2016. Macrozoobenthos in the watercourses of the Bureya River downstream in the construction zone of the Lower Bureya hydroelectric power station (Amurskaya oblast). In: Freshwater Life. Vol. 2. Vladivostok: Dalnauka P. 197–220. [In Russian]
Tsalolikhin S.Ya. (Ed.). 1994. The key to freshwater invertebrates of Russia and adjacent areas. Lower invertebrates. St. Petersburg. Vol. 1. 400 p. [In Russian]
Tsalolikhin S.Ya. (Ed.). 1995. The key to freshwater invertebrates of Russia and adjacent areas. Crustacea. Vol. 2. St. Petersburg. 630 p. [In Russian]
Tsalolikhin S.Ya. (Ed.). 1997. The key to freshwater invertebrates of Russia and adjacent areas. Arachnida. Lower insects. Vol. 3. St. Petersburg. 442 p. [In Russian]
Tsalolikhin S.Ya. (Ed.). 2000. The key to freshwater invertebrates of Russia and adjacent areas. Diptera. Vol. 4. St. Petersburg: Nauka. 1000 p. [In Russian]
Tsalolikhin S.Ya. (Ed.). 2001. The key to freshwater invertebrates of Russia and adjacent areas. Higher insects. Vol. 5. St. Petersburg: Nauka. 825 p. [In Russian]
Tsalolikhin S.Ya. (Ed.). 2004. The key to freshwater invertebrates of Russia and adjacent areas. Mollusca, Polychaeta, Nemertea. Vol. 6. St. Petersburg: Nauka. 528 p. [In Russian]
Vshivkova T.S., Nikitina I.A. 2010. The first data on the fauna of freshwater invertebrates in Bolon wetlands. In: Yu.I. Zhuravlev (Ed.): IX Far-Eastern Conference on Nature Conservation Problems (Vladivostok, 20–22 October, 2010). Vladivostok: Dalnauka. P. 116–125. [In Russian]
Wrubleski D.A., Ross L.C.M. 2011. Aquatic Invertebrates of Prairie Wetlands: Community Composition, Ecological Roles, and Impacts of Agriculture. In: K.D. Floate (Ed.): Arthropods of Canadian Grasslands (Vol. 2): Inhabitants of a Changing Landscape. Ottawa (ON): Biological Survey of Canada. P. 91–116. DOI: 10.3752/9780968932155.ch5
Wu H., Guan Q., Lu K., Batzer D.P. 2019. Aquatic macroinvertebrate assemblages in wetlands of Northeastern China. Hydrobiologia 838: 153–162. DOI: 10.1007/s10750-019-03984-6
Yavorskaya N.M. 2014. Structure of benthic community in Amurskaya channel (river Amur, vicinity of Khabarovsk) before a catastrophic flood in 2013. In: E.A. Makarchenko (Ed.): V.Ya. Levanidov′s Biennial Memorial Meetings (19–21 March, 2014). Vol. 6. Vladivostok: Dalnauka. P. 778–786. [In Russian]
Yavorskaya N.M. 2017a. Structure of benthic communities in watercourses in the construction area of the Nizhne-Bureyskaya Hydroelectric power station. In: E.A. Makarchenko (Ed.): V.Ya. Levanidov′s Biennial Memorial Meetings (20–22 March, 2017). Vol. 7. Vladivostok: FSC Biodiversity FEB RAS. P. 267–277. [In Russian]
Yavorskaya N.M. 2017b. Amur River status after the catastrophic flood in 2013: assessment of changes in the zoobenthos structure on the example of the Amurskaya channel (Khabarovsk vicinity). Water: chemistry and ecology 2: 51–58. [In Russian]
Yavorskaya N.M., Makarchenko E.A. 2018. The first data on the composition and structure of zoobenthos in the river Simmi of the Bolonsky State Nature Reserve (Khabarovsky Krai). In: E.Ya. Frisman (Ed.): VII All-Russian Scientific Conference Present Problems of Regional Development (Birobidzhan, 09–11 October, 2018). Birobidzhan: IKARP FEB RAS. P. 225–227. [In Russian]
Yavorskaya N.M., Orel O.V., Makarchenko M.A., Makarchenko E.A. 2016. The chironomid fauna (Diptera, Chironomidae) of the Bolonsky Nature Reserve (Khabarovsk Territory). Euroasian Entomological Journal 15(3): 201–210. [In Russian]
Zasypkina I.A., Samokhvalov V.L. 2015. Zoobenthos in the watercourses in the northern Okhotsk Sea Coast. Magadan: Kordis. 327 p. [In Russian]