Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4427371 | Environmental Pollution | 2007 | 13 Pages |
Nematode communities of eight sites from three river catchments were investigated in terms of the genera composition, feeding types, and life-history strategists. The sampling sites showed a gradient of anthropogenic contamination with heavy metals and organic pollutants being important factors in differentiating the sites. Nematode community structure was related to sediment pollution and the hydro-morphological structure of the sampling sites. Heavily contaminated sites were characterized by communities with high relative abundances of omnivorous and predacious nematodes (Tobrilus, c–p 3; Mononchus, c–p 4), while sites with low to medium contamination were dominated by bacterivorous nematodes (Monhystera, Daptonema; c–p 2) or suction feeders (Dorylaimus, c–p 4). The relatively high Maturity Index values in the heavily polluted sites were surprising. Nematodes turned out to be a suitable organism group for monitoring sediment quality, with generic composition being the most accurate indicator for assessing differences in nematode community structure.