Abstract:
The innumerable benthic microhabitats in freshwater ecosystems support a wide variety of
fauna. These benthic fauna are sensitive to natural as well as anthropogenic disturbance
events such as water level fluctuations, temperature variations, agrochemical inputs etc. The
present study was carried out to investigate the effect of seasonal water level fluctuation on
the distribution and colonization of benthic fauna at some irrigation reservoirs in Sri Lanka.
The study was carried at 10 reservoirs namely Angamuwa wewa, Balalu wewa, Dewahuwa
wewa, Ibbankatuwa wewa, Kandalama wewa, Katiyawa wewa, Kala wewa,
Siyambalangamuwa wewa, and Usgala-Siyambalangamuwa wewa in the Kala Oya river
basin in Sri Lanka. The study period (September, 2014 to March 2015) included a dry season
followed by a rainy season. Soil core samples (n = 15, volume = 0.5 dm3 each) from within 3
random locations in the marginal zone of each reservoir at each season were collected using a
soil corer. After the samples were wet sieved in situ through a 1 mm sieve, the macrobenthic
fauna in each sample were separated, identified to the nearest possible taxonomic level and
enumerated separately. Environmental parameters such as aquatic vegetation, shadiness, soil
texture, soil pH and the degree of water inundation were also measured using standard
methods. The Shannon-Wiener diversity index for each reservoir for the two climatic seasons
were determined and were statistically compared by a t-test. The abundance of benthic
species at different study sites were analyzed using cluster analysis. The importance of
environmental variables on the abundance of macrobenthos for both seasons were tested by
the Principal Component Analysis (PCA).
Altogether 17 taxa were recorded. Bellamya (Mystery snail) (62.2 ± 17.2) and Melanoides
(Trumpet snail) (38.5 ± 11.6) were the dominant taxa during the dry season while Bithynia
(Mud snail) (15.77 ± 6.75) and Bellamya (4.83 ± 1.38) dominated during the rainy season.
The species richness was higher in rainy season (17 taxa) than in the dry season (11 taxa).
This was due to the presence of six additional taxa i.e. Chironomidae, Oligocheata,
Ephemeroptera, Trematoda, Zygoptera and Bithynia) during the rainy season. The species
diversity of the reservoirs was significantly high during the rainy season (t – test, P = 6.2148,
α = 0.05, df = 22). PCA revealed that the degree of water inundation and aquatic vegetation
to be the key factors that determine the species distribution of these reservoirs. The elevated
species diversity perhaps may be due to the enhanced growth of aquatic vegetation at the
shallow marginal habitats when the reservoirs were inundated by water during the rainy
season. The change of this habitat alteration may have positively supported the colonization
of new insect taxa such as Chironomids, Ephemeropterans and Zygopterans into these
shallow marginal habitats of irrigation reservoirs in the Kala Oya River Basin in Sri Lanka.