Endorheic versus karstic lakes: patterns of ostracod distributions and lake typology in a Mediterranean landscape (Castilla - La Mancha, Spain)
J. R. Roca, F. Mezquita, J. Rueda, A. Camacho and M. R. Miracle
Abstract
In a survey for conservation of non-marine
aquatic systems, the ostracod compositions of 43 water bodies sampled in
central Spain were analysed by multivariate ordination (DCA) and
classification (TWINSPAN) methods, showing a clear division in lake typology.
The wide variety of life modes and habitat requirements of non-marine ostracod
species yields assemblages of species of value as ecological indicators.
Endorheic shallow lakes, highly temporary, are characterized by an assemblage
of circum-Mediterranean and endemic species. Karstic and more stable lakes are
inhabited by northern Holarctic or Palaearctic species, depending on the
history and environmental conditions of the water body. Between these two
extremes, the study of ostracod assemblages permits the distinction, on a
finer scale, of a gradient of lake types with different disturbance
conditions, resulting from a combination of hydrological, climatic, chemical
and anthropogenic factors. At the extreme of that gradient, highly tolerant
cosmopolitan species play an important role in the ostracod community of sites
severely affected by human activities.
Marine and Freshwater Research 51(4) 311 - 319 doi:10.1071/MF99103





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