Freshwater stream ecosystems of James Ross Island, Antarctica

The freshwater streams of James Ross Island share many of the features common to other Antarctic streams. There is a diel variation in temperature and discharge, which follows the daily insolation cycle; catchments are barren; stream vegetation is predominantly algal, comprising mat-forming cyanobacteria and filamentous chlorophytes; and physical factors, particularly turbidity and bed stability are important in determining biomass and composition of algal assemblages. Nutrient concentrations vary from stream to stream and over a diel cycle, with minimum dissolved N in late afternoon. Biomass attained and photosynthetic and respiratory rates are also comparable to those recorded in other Antarctic streams, with low productivity/biomass ratios in perennial assemblages.

Details

Publication status:
Published
Author(s):
Authors: Hawes, Ian, Brazier, Paul

Date:
1 September, 1991
Journal/Source:
Antarctic Science / 3
Page(s):
265-271
Link to published article:
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0954102091000329