Abstract

Faunal composition of aquatic invertebrate communities associated with submerged parts of several species of macrophytes were studied in different areas in littoral Lake Tonle Sap in Cambodia, with special reference to those in root systems (interrhizon) of a free-floating water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes). Nine phyla of invertebrates were collected, of which oligochaetes, shrimps and Limnoperna mussels were abundant along with meiobenthic crustaceans. The macrophyte-associated invertebrates in Lake Tonle Sap might be unique in having abundant sessile animals, such as sponges, bryozoans and Limnoperna mussels. The Limnoperna mussels attached to macrophytes were more abundant in offshore and inundated forest than in secluded vegetational stands toward the shoreline. It suggests that water movement can be an important factor determining the distribution and abundance of the sessile animals by controlling larval dispersions and might be associated with the hydrological characteristic of the lake, i.e., the lake opens to the large Mekong River with drastic seasonal changes in water level.

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