Abstract
The streams of Signy Island are varied and extremely seasonal environments. Water flows from November/December to March/April; streams are frozen for the rest of the year. Streams usually flow through small, barren catchments and are nutrient poor, though they may be enriched by dense summer populations of seabirds and seals. Temperatures are consistently low. Stream depth is maximal during the spring melt period, declining over the course of the summer. Vegetation is exclusively algal, and filamentous chlorophytes from a particularly conspicuous component. Small numbers of vegetative cells survive the long frozen period in situ. A steady increase in standing crop results in a maximum 2 to 3 months after flow begins. Sloughing is the major loss mechanism and grazers are effectively absent. Three taxa of filamentous algae are common in Signy streams, species of Zygnema, Mougeotia and Klebsormidium. The distributions of these algae are described and related to physical and chemical features of their environment.
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Hawes, I. Filamentous green algae in freshwater streams on Signy Island, Antarctica. Hydrobiologia 172, 1–18 (1989). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00031608
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00031608