Abstract
Lake Abijata lies in a shallow depression (maximum depth 8–9.5 m); the water is green with phytoplankton and it supports large fish and bird communities. Lake Shala lies in a deep caldera (maximum depth reputedly 260 m); phytoplankton is sparse and fish and bird communities scanty.
Lakes Abijata and Shala, sampled in January, 1985, had conductivities of 14 000 and 21 000 microSiemens cm-1 at 25 °C respectively, mainly due to high sodium, carbonate and chloride ions. Calcium concentrations are very low.
The benthic fauna was studied with an Ekman grab to a depth of 8.5 m in Abijata and 15.5 m in Shala and was found to be dense in both lakes but varying greatly in composition at different depths. In Abijata the benthos consisted mainly of Ostracoda and Chironomidae, and in Shala mainly of Tubificidae, Ostracoda and Chironomidae. There were very few Nematoda. No true halophilic species were found but the community consisted of euryhaline forms found also in non-saline waters. Predatory invertebrates were absent and many of the dominant species, notably of the Chironomidae, were different from those of non-saline lakes nearby.
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Tudorancea, C., D. Harrison, A. The benthic communities of the saline lakes Abijata and Shala (Ethiopia). Hydrobiologia 158, 117–123 (1988). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00026270
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00026270