Item Details

Title: THE DIVERSITY AND ABUNDANCE OF ZOOPLANKTON IN THE LAKE VICTORIA AND KYOGA BASINS AND THEIR RELATIONSHIP TO FISH PRODUCTION

Date Published: December 2000
Author/s: Lucas M. Ndawula and Vincent Kiggundu
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Affiliation: Fisheries Research Institute, P. O. Box 343, Jinja Uganda
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Abstract:

Biological diversity of an ecosystem is considered a reliable measure of the state of health of the ecosystem. In Uganda's large lakes, the Victoria and Kyoga, the past three decades have been characterized by profound changes in fish species composition following the introduction of the piscivorous Nile perch (Oguto-Ohwayo 1990). Over 300 haplochromine cichlid species comprising a wide range of trophic groups were lost along with a host of non-cichlid fishes which occupied virtually all available ecological niches and in the lakes (Witte 1992). A second major ecological event has been the gradual nutrient enrichment of the water bodies (eutrophication) from diffuse and point sources, while at the same time pollutants have also gained entrance into the water systems in pace with indusfrial development and human population increases in the lake basins. Eutrophication and pollution have drastically altered the physical and-chemical character of the water medium in which different fauna and flora thrive