Abstract

Three years of studies on some Indian Himalayan rivers in Jammu & Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, and Sikkim revealed the presence of Didymosphenia geminata (Lyngbye) M. Schmidt, a large diatom, hitherto unreported from these areas. This is first report on the occurrence of this diatom in some Indian Himalayan rivers: Kishanganga in Jammu & Kashmir, Ravi in Himachal Pradesh in Western Himalaya and in Teesta river and its two tributaries, Lachen Chhu and Lachung Chhu from Sikkim in the Eastern Himalaya. D. geminata is the most abundant taxon in both suspended and benthic algal communities in these rivers. The species exhibits wide ecological amplitude, allowing it to inhabit both cold and warm waters. We also recorded the exotic brown trout, Salmotruttafario in these Himalayan rivers. However, in Central Himalayan rivers, Alaknanda, Bhilangana, Mandakini and Dhauliganga in Uttarakhand, where this diatom was absent the trout were absent too. Our studies indicate that D. geminata may extend its distribution range to other Himalayan rivers, hitherto uninhabited by the diatom, depending on the mode of introduction of exotic trout in these rivers.

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