Abstract

In Nepal, the impairment status of lakes and reservoirs has generally been measured and classified based on nutrient concentrations and physico-chemical parameters, typically with no direct measurement of biological communities. In response to the recent focus on the bioassessment of lakes and reservoirs, the macroinvertebrate-based Nepal Lake Biotic Index (NLBI) has been developed. Benthic samples were collected from reference and impaired lakes during 2006 and 2009 from two ecological zones: Terai-Siwaliks and Mid-Hills. We used a tolerance score based on a ten-point scoring system ranging from very pollution sensitive to very pollution tolerant taxa to calculate the NLBI. In reference to the transformation scale, the calculated NLBI describes the lake water quality as high, good, fair, poor and bad. Candidate metrics of richness measures and tolerance measures discriminated well between the reference and impaired lakes (Mann-Whitney U test, p < 0.01). The relationships between the biological metrics and the environmental variables were also established with the lake water quality class (LWQC). Further, the validation of the NLBI performance was done by assessing nine lakes/reservoirs from both the zones. Thus, the index presented here provides an effective method to measure the ecological condition of lakes and reservoirs in Nepal.

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