Gastropod diversity, distribution and abundance in habitats with and without anthropogenic disturbances in Lake Victoria, Kenya

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Gastropod diversity, distribution and abundance in habitats with and without anthropogenic disturbances in Lake Victoria, Kenya. / Lange, C. N.; Kristensen, Thomas K.; Madsen, Henry.

I: African Journal of Aquatic Science, Bind 38, Nr. 3, 2013, s. 295-304.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Lange, CN, Kristensen, TK & Madsen, H 2013, 'Gastropod diversity, distribution and abundance in habitats with and without anthropogenic disturbances in Lake Victoria, Kenya', African Journal of Aquatic Science, bind 38, nr. 3, s. 295-304. https://doi.org/10.2989/16085914.2013.797380

APA

Lange, C. N., Kristensen, T. K., & Madsen, H. (2013). Gastropod diversity, distribution and abundance in habitats with and without anthropogenic disturbances in Lake Victoria, Kenya. African Journal of Aquatic Science, 38(3), 295-304. https://doi.org/10.2989/16085914.2013.797380

Vancouver

Lange CN, Kristensen TK, Madsen H. Gastropod diversity, distribution and abundance in habitats with and without anthropogenic disturbances in Lake Victoria, Kenya. African Journal of Aquatic Science. 2013;38(3):295-304. https://doi.org/10.2989/16085914.2013.797380

Author

Lange, C. N. ; Kristensen, Thomas K. ; Madsen, Henry. / Gastropod diversity, distribution and abundance in habitats with and without anthropogenic disturbances in Lake Victoria, Kenya. I: African Journal of Aquatic Science. 2013 ; Bind 38, Nr. 3. s. 295-304.

Bibtex

@article{a5ccc7f375bd40778ccc2bc8fbba556b,
title = "Gastropod diversity, distribution and abundance in habitats with and without anthropogenic disturbances in Lake Victoria, Kenya",
abstract = "We investigated freshwater gastropod diversity, abundance and distribution in habitats with and without anthropogenic disturbance in two localities, Ndere in the Winam Gulf and Mbita Point, Lake Victoria, Kenya, from May 2002 to January 2004. A total of 133 984 gastropod specimens belonging to 15 species were recorded, 14 from Mbita and 12 from Ndere. Two species, Ferrissia kavirondica and Cleopatra cridlandi, which were recorded only from undisturbed habitats, could be indicators of least disturbed habitats. Water chemistry did differ between fish landing sites and undisturbed habitats at some sampling times, indicating that differences due to human impact do exist, but these are dependent on periods of calm weather. The study shows that anthropogenic disturbances cause ecological changes that can be exploited by some snail species, especially Biomphalaria choanomphala and Melanoides tuberculata, while other species may not tolerate these changes. In order to protect gastropod diversity and avoid dominance of intermediate hosts, such as B. choanomphala, a management plan for the use of these fish landing sites should be developed. This could include rules on how to dispose of fish remnants and other wastes so as to reduce local eutrophication, thereby reducing risks associated with transmission of potential snail-borne diseases. {\textcopyright} 2013",
keywords = "biodiversity, conservation, human impact, indicator species, intermediate hosts",
author = "Lange, {C. N.} and Kristensen, {Thomas K.} and Henry Madsen",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.2989/16085914.2013.797380",
language = "English",
volume = "38",
pages = "295--304",
journal = "African Journal of Aquatic Science",
issn = "1608-5914",
publisher = "National Inquiry Services Centre",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Gastropod diversity, distribution and abundance in habitats with and without anthropogenic disturbances in Lake Victoria, Kenya

AU - Lange, C. N.

AU - Kristensen, Thomas K.

AU - Madsen, Henry

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - We investigated freshwater gastropod diversity, abundance and distribution in habitats with and without anthropogenic disturbance in two localities, Ndere in the Winam Gulf and Mbita Point, Lake Victoria, Kenya, from May 2002 to January 2004. A total of 133 984 gastropod specimens belonging to 15 species were recorded, 14 from Mbita and 12 from Ndere. Two species, Ferrissia kavirondica and Cleopatra cridlandi, which were recorded only from undisturbed habitats, could be indicators of least disturbed habitats. Water chemistry did differ between fish landing sites and undisturbed habitats at some sampling times, indicating that differences due to human impact do exist, but these are dependent on periods of calm weather. The study shows that anthropogenic disturbances cause ecological changes that can be exploited by some snail species, especially Biomphalaria choanomphala and Melanoides tuberculata, while other species may not tolerate these changes. In order to protect gastropod diversity and avoid dominance of intermediate hosts, such as B. choanomphala, a management plan for the use of these fish landing sites should be developed. This could include rules on how to dispose of fish remnants and other wastes so as to reduce local eutrophication, thereby reducing risks associated with transmission of potential snail-borne diseases. © 2013

AB - We investigated freshwater gastropod diversity, abundance and distribution in habitats with and without anthropogenic disturbance in two localities, Ndere in the Winam Gulf and Mbita Point, Lake Victoria, Kenya, from May 2002 to January 2004. A total of 133 984 gastropod specimens belonging to 15 species were recorded, 14 from Mbita and 12 from Ndere. Two species, Ferrissia kavirondica and Cleopatra cridlandi, which were recorded only from undisturbed habitats, could be indicators of least disturbed habitats. Water chemistry did differ between fish landing sites and undisturbed habitats at some sampling times, indicating that differences due to human impact do exist, but these are dependent on periods of calm weather. The study shows that anthropogenic disturbances cause ecological changes that can be exploited by some snail species, especially Biomphalaria choanomphala and Melanoides tuberculata, while other species may not tolerate these changes. In order to protect gastropod diversity and avoid dominance of intermediate hosts, such as B. choanomphala, a management plan for the use of these fish landing sites should be developed. This could include rules on how to dispose of fish remnants and other wastes so as to reduce local eutrophication, thereby reducing risks associated with transmission of potential snail-borne diseases. © 2013

KW - biodiversity

KW - conservation

KW - human impact

KW - indicator species

KW - intermediate hosts

U2 - 10.2989/16085914.2013.797380

DO - 10.2989/16085914.2013.797380

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:84890108531

VL - 38

SP - 295

EP - 304

JO - African Journal of Aquatic Science

JF - African Journal of Aquatic Science

SN - 1608-5914

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 124162450