Abstract
SUMMARY. 1. Dense growths of Myriophyllum heterophyllum influenced temperature, dissolved oxygen, pH and light levels in the littoral waters of Lake Winnipesaukee, a soft‐water. New England lake. Periphyton species composition and abundance (algal units cm' stem) were related to the macrophyte‐mediated changes in the physicochemical environment.2. Duringearlysummer, M. heterophyllum occupied onlythe lower part of the water column. Limnetic and littoral waters exchanged readily and were chemically similar. Early summer periphyton species composition was dominated by diatoms from the phytoplankton, entangled in the finely dissected leaves of M. heterophyllum.3. By mid‐summer, M. heterophyllum occupied the entire watercolumn of the littoral zone. The metabolic and photosynthetic activity and dense foliage of M. heterophyllum created marked vertical gradients in physicochemical conditions. Mid‐day temperature, dissolved oxygen, pH and light levels were maximal in the surface waters of the M. heterophyllum mat during the summer. Concurrently, periphyton species composition shifted to blue‐green and then to a filamentous green alga on the apex and mid‐stem. On the lower stem, diatoms consistently dominated the periphyton.4. Periphyton abundance on the apex was inversely related to apical elongation. Temporal fluctuations of periphyton abundance on the lower and mid‐stem were small throughout the study. Periphyton abundance was lowest on the lower stem, where the deteriorating leaves provided less surface area for colonization.
Published Version
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