PHYTOSOCIOLOGY OF SOME COASTAL WATER-BODIES IN SRI LANKA WITH PARTICULAR EMPHASIS ON THREE LAGOONS

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dc.contributor.author Jayatissa, Loku Pulukkuttige
dc.date.accessioned 2020-01-07T07:23:45Z
dc.date.available 2020-01-07T07:23:45Z
dc.date.issued 1987-12
dc.identifier.citation Jayatissa, Loku Pulukkuttige. (1987). PHYTOSOCIOLOGY OF SOME COASTAL WATER-BODIES IN SRI LANKA WITH PARTICULAR EMPHASIS ON THREE LAGOONS. Matara, Department of Botany, University of Ruhuna, Matara, SRI LANKA. en_US
dc.identifier.other 35436
dc.identifier.uri http://ir.lib.ruh.ac.lk/xmlui/handle/iruor/26
dc.description.abstract A comparative study was made of the phytosociology o-f mangrove vegetation and physicochemistry o-f forty-three water-bodies selected along the coast from F'alatupana in the southeastern arid-zone to Puttalam in the northwestern arid-zone of Sri Lanka with the major emphasis on the three lagoons at Rekawa, Kalametiya and Lunama. The floristic data were statistically analysed by Indicator Species Analysis (ISA) for c1assification and Receprocal Averaging (RA) for ordination. The coast covered all the c1imatic-zones and most of the major soil-types of the lowland of Sri Lanka. The multivariate analyses of the floristic data from the extensive survey of the forty-three mangrove communities revealed that most vegetational diversity is related to climate with differences in salinity and shallowness of the water-bodies being responsible partly for the heterogeneity between the major communities. The three lagoons at Rekawa, kalametiya and Lunama differed geomorphological 1y , «hydrographical 1y and physicochemical 1y. hydrolog i cal 1y , At Rekawa both influx and efflux of seawater as well as freshwater occur through the same canal, while the Kalametiya lagoon is almost a running water-body because the inland irrigation waters flow continuously through it into the sea; the Lunama lagoon remains almost stagnent, has no connection with the sea and receives water -from the Kalametiya lagoon via a canal. The physiochemical parameters investigated were salinity, alkalinity, pH, dissolved oxygen content, .reactive soluble, phosphate and suspended matter, all of which exhibited marked seasonal variations in all the three lagoons; so was the diurnal variations in salinity, temperature and pH while their spatial heterogeneity was highest at Rekawa and lowest at Lunama. The mangrove vegetation was most extensive and luxuriant with the highest spec i es-r i chness and -floristic zonation at Rekawa and least at Lunama while that at Kalametiya being somewhat i nteremedi ate. As evident -from the multivariate results, the vegetational differences between the three mangrove complexes were associated with differences in salinity and the status of potassium and sodium; the floristic heterogeneity within each mangrove complex was also related to the differential influence of salinity which was further found to create edaphic, particularly cation, gradients so causing floristic zonation from the water's edge at the lagoon to the high-lying ground. * The floristic data from the monthly samples of phytoplanktons of the three lagoons were also analysed for ISA classification and RA ordination; this is probably the first such treatment of phytoplankto data. According to the results the maximum phytoplankton differences between the three lagoons are related to salinity and the monthly ■fluctuations within individual lagoons are associated with variations in salinity, rainfall, total suspended matter and nutrients such as phosphate. Diatoms are predominant at R'ekawa and blue green algae at Lunama with Kalametiya sharing both groups; the Importance Value Indices con-firmed this observed predominance. A brief study was also made of the phytoplankton productivity of the three lagoons. Both the overall productivity and that of the individual species exhibited considerable monthly fluctuations in association with variations in salinity, total suspended matter and rai nfal1. The results are discussed with major emphasis on the edaphic, physicochemical and hydrological control of the variations of mangrove and phytoplankton flora of the three lagoons at R'ekawa, Kalametiya and Lunama. en_US
dc.description.sponsorship UN University, Tokyo provided through the MARGA Institute. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher University of Ruhuna en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries ;35436
dc.subject phytosociology en_US
dc.subject coastal water-bodies en_US
dc.subject lagoons en_US
dc.title PHYTOSOCIOLOGY OF SOME COASTAL WATER-BODIES IN SRI LANKA WITH PARTICULAR EMPHASIS ON THREE LAGOONS en_US
dc.type Masters Thesis en_US


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