Skip To Content

TitleAquatic biological investigations of the Muskeg River watershed
Publication TypeReport
Year of Publication1979
AuthorsLock, M. A., & Wallace R. R.
Pagination29 pages
PublisherAlberta Oil Sands Environmental Research Program
Place PublishedEdmonton, AB
Publication Languageeng
KeywordsAOSERP, aquatic environment, aquatic species, Athabasca River, federal government, tributaries
Abstract

The epilithic microbial and micro-invertebrate communities under conditions of light and shade were studied from April to November 1978. During a period of increasing light intensity from May to June, the level of chlorophyll a (an algal biomass indicator) and numbers of Bacillariophyta in the shade were considerably higher than the level and numbers in the light. This was considered to be evidence supporting the hypothesis that the midsummer decline in algal populations was due to light inhibition. Numbers of bacteria and carbohydrate, total organic carbon (TOC) and total organic nitrogen (TON) concentrations were significantly correlated with algal biomass in the light whereas only numbers of bacteria and carbohydrate were correlated with algal biomass in the shade. The potential causal relationships between these parameters are discussed. The population dynamics of the micro-Invertebrate populations are discussed in relation to the quantity and quality (C:N ratio of epilithon) of their food supply. Lastly, the relevance of these findings to oil sands development is discussed, where the alteration of the river's light regime by the removal of riparian vegetation could result in decreased production while silt additions during the months of May to July could result in increased productivity.

Notes

AOSERP Project WS 1.3.2. AOSERP Report 67.

URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/10402/era.23556
Locational Keywords

Athabasca River, Muskeg River

Active Link

http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/8410852

Group

OSEMB

Citation Key51567

Enter keywords or search terms and press Search

Search this site


Subscribe to the site

Syndicate content

Bookmark and Share