Abstract

A pioneering limnological investigation was carried out in Bhutan in a small peat bog in the Trashiyangtse district (1950 m above sea level) from February 2000 to January 2002. The sampled pond water had low transparency (55.0–95.0 cm), was typically acidic (pH 5.69–6.58) with soft water (alkalinity, 11.0–36.0 mg/l; total hardness, 10.0–34.0 mg/l), and had low to moderate specific conductivity (17.0–62.0 µS/cm). Further, moderate Na (2.0–6.8 mg/l), K (1.8–13.5 mg/l), sulphate (0.85–2.99 mg/l), and silicate (2.5–15.0 mg/l) concentrations as well as low nutrient levels such as phosphate (0.006–0.170 mg/l) and nitrate (0.003–0.180 mg/l) characterize the water in the peat bog. The recorded net plankton comprised 27 species of phytoplankton and 49 species of zooplankton, with the latter indicating greater homogeneity and breaking down into Rotifera (23 species) > Cladocera (13 species) > Rhizopoda (8 species) > Copepoda (3 species) > Ostracoda = Nematoda (1 species each). On the other hand, the net plankton density ranged between 93 and 692 number/l (n/l) with numerical dominance by phytoplankton (68.5% ± 12%), of which Chlorophyceae were predominant (90 ± 63 n/l). Zooplankton showed moderately high diversity (2.745 ± 0.293) and evenness (0.925 ± 0.049) and exhibited almost equal abundance of four recorded groups, namely Cladocera (20 ± 15 n/l) > Rotifera (15 ± 6 n/l) > Copepoda (14 ± 7 n/l) > Rhizopoda (14 ± 4 n/l). While no significant impact of abiotic factors was recorded on zooplankton density, rainfall alone was the most important factor that influenced net plankton and various groups of phytoplankton. Comments on some comparative limnological attributes are also made with similar as well as different habitats in the nearby Himalayan countries.

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