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Featured researches published by Anna Wachnicka.


Hydrobiologia | 2006

Spatial and temporal distributions of epiphytic diatoms growing on Thalassia testudinum Banks ex König: relationships to water quality

Thomas A. Frankovich; Evelyn E. Gaiser; Joseph C. Zieman; Anna Wachnicka

The spatial and temporal distributions of the epiphytic diatom flora on Thalassia testudinum was described within the Florida Bay estuary and at one Atlantic site east of the Florida Keys over a 1-year period. Species of the genus Mastogloia dominated the epiphytic diatom flora (82 out of 332 total species). Nonmetric Multidimensional Scaling (NMDS) and Analysis of Similarity (ANOSIM) revealed four distinct spatial assemblages and two temporal assemblages. Eastern and western Florida Bay assemblages were identified within the estuary. The eastern diatom assemblage was characterized by high relative abundances of Brachysira aponina and Nitzschia liebetruthii, while the western assemblage was characterized by the abundance of Reimerothrix floridensis, particularly during summer. Two diverse and distinct marine assemblages, one located in the Gulf of Mexico along the western edge of Florida Bay and the other behind the Florida reef tract in the Atlantic Ocean, were also identified. Analysis of the spatial distribution of diatoms and water quality characteristics within Florida Bay suggest that these assemblages may be structured by salinity and nutrient availability, particularly P. The Gulf of Mexico and the western Florida Bay assemblages were associated with higher water column salinities and TP concentrations and lower DIN concentrations and TN:TP ratios relative to the eastern Florida Bay assemblage. The temporal variation in diatom assemblages was associated with water temperature, though temporal indicator species were few relative to the number of spatial indicators.


Journal of Phycology | 2009

Nutrient effects on seagrass epiphyte community structure in Florida Bay.

Thomas A. Frankovich; Anna R. Armitage; Anna Wachnicka; Evelyn E. Gaiser; James W. Fourqurean

A field experiment was employed in Florida Bay investigating the response of seagrass epiphyte communities to nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) additions. While most of the variability in epiphyte community structure was related to uncontrolled temporal and spatial environmental heterogeneity, P additions increased the relative abundance of the red algae–cyanobacterial complex and green algae, with a concomitant decrease in diatoms. When N was added along with P, the observed changes to the diatoms and the red algae–cyanobacterial complex were in the same direction as P‐only treatments, but the responses were decreased in magnitude. Within the diatom community, species relative abundances, species richness, and diversity responded weakly to nutrient addition. P additions produced changes in diatom community structure that were limited to summer and were stronger in eastern Florida Bay than in the western bay. These changes were consistent with well‐established temporal and spatial patterns of P limitation. Despite the significant change in community structure resulting from P addition, diatom communities from the same site and time, regardless of nutrient treatment, remained more similar to one another than to the diatom communities subject to identical nutrient treatments from different sites and times. Overall, epiphyte communities exhibited responses to P addition that were most evident at the division level.


Diatom Research | 2007

CHARACTERIZATION OF AMPHORA AND SEMINAVIS FROM SOUTH FLORIDA, U.S.A.

Anna Wachnicka; Evelyn E. Gaiser

Species in the genera Amphora and Seminavis were investigated in marine and coastal environments of South Florida. Taxa were compared with published descriptions, type specimens and photographic micrographs of type specimens obtained from several museums, resulting in refinement and revision of some nomenclatural concepts. We describe nineteen new species and two new varieties of Amphora (A. americana, A. archibaldii, A. caribaea, A. crenulata, A. floridae, A. gramenorum, A. indentata, A. lacinia, A. lunulata, A. luteum, A. montgomeryi, A. pseudoproteus, A. pseudotenuissima, A. scutella, A. spriggerica, A. subtropica, A. tegetum, A. vadosini, A. acuta var. parva, A. cymbifera var. heritierarum) and three new species of Seminavis (S. cyrtorapha, S. delicatula, S. witkowskii). Rare taxa for which we could not find descriptions are also presented with detailed descriptions and images. Ecological affinities are provided and compared to those reported in the literature. We use the broad representation of these two genera in the flora of South Florida to resolve taxonomic confusion in the literature and, through comparison of collected specimens with type material, validate taxonomic assignments of problematic taxa.


Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia | 2010

Mastogloia smithii var lacustris Grun.: A Structural Engineer of Calcareous Mats in Karstic Subtropical Wetlands

Evelyn E. Gaiser; Josette M. La Hée; Franco Tobias; Anna Wachnicka

ABSTRACT. Mastogloia smithii var. lacustris Grun. is the dominant diatom in periphyton mats of the calcareous, freshwater to brackish wetlands of Caribbean coasts. Despite oligotrophy, frequent desiccation, high irradiance and temperatures, and occasional fire, periphyton communities in these wetlands can produce over 2000 g m-2 of organic biomass, prompting studies that examine stress resistance and maintenance of algal mats under extreme conditions. The diatom flora inhabiting periphyton mats from over 500 sites in the Florida Everglades and similar wetlands in Belize, Jamaica and Mexico was examined, and M. smithii var. lacustris was a persistent component, present in 97% of samples and comprising up to 80% of a diverse diatom assemblage. Valves at various stages of division were observed encased in extracellular polysaccharide that exceeded the cell volume; SEM observations confirm issuance from mantle pores resulting in suspension of the cell in a matrix dominated by cyanobacterial filaments. Using corresponding biophysical data from the collection sites, we define the optima for M. smithii var. lacustris along salinity, pH, phosphorus, and water depth gradients. Experiments revealed a collapse of M. smithii var. lacustris populations in the presence of above-ambient phosphorus concentrations and a rapid resurgence upon reflooding of desiccated mats. This widespread diatom taxon appears to play a critical role similar to that of cyanobacteria in microbial mats, and its disappearance in the presence of enrichment threatens biodiversity and the natural function in these systems that are increasingly influenced by urbanization.


The diatoms: applications for the environmental and earth sciences | 2010

The Diatoms: Estuarine paleoenvironmental reconstructions using diatoms

Sherri Cooper; Evelyn E. Gaiser; Anna Wachnicka


Organic Geochemistry | 2006

Occurrence of C25 highly branched isoprenoids (HBIs) in Florida Bay: Paleoenvironmental indicators of diatom-derived organic matter inputs

Yunping Xu; Rudolf Jaffé; Anna Wachnicka; Evelyn E. Gaiser


Estuaries and Coasts | 2010

Distribution of Diatoms and Development of Diatom-Based Models for Inferring Salinity and Nutrient Concentrations in Florida Bay and Adjacent Coastal Wetlands of South Florida (USA)

Anna Wachnicka; Evelyn E. Gaiser; Laurel S. Collins; Thomas J. Frankovich; Joseph N. Boyer


Ecological Indicators | 2011

Ecology and distribution of diatoms in Biscayne Bay, Florida (USA): Implications for bioassessment and paleoenvironmental studies

Anna Wachnicka; Evelyn E. Gaiser; Joseph N. Boyer


Archive | 2004

Diatom Indicators of Ecosystem Change in Subtropical Coastal Wetlands

Michael S. Ross; Anna Wachnicka; Pablo L. Ruiz; Franco Tobias; Evelyn E. Gaiser


Journal of Paleolimnology | 2013

Challenges in using siliceous subfossils as a tool for inferring past water level and hydroperiod in Everglades marshes

Christopher Sanchez; Evelyn E. Gaiser; Colin J. Saunders; Anna Wachnicka; Nicholas Oehm; Christopher Craft

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Evelyn E. Gaiser

Florida International University

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Thomas A. Frankovich

Florida International University

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G. Lynn Wingard

United States Geological Survey

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Laurel S. Collins

Florida International University

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Christopher E. Bernhardt

United States Geological Survey

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Franco Tobias

Florida International University

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James W. Fourqurean

Florida International University

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Joseph N. Boyer

Florida International University

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Yunping Xu

Florida International University

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