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Featured researches published by Eti E. Levi.


Hydrobiologia | 2015

Size-based diel migration of zooplankton in Mediterranean shallow lakes assessed from in situ experiments with artificial plants

Sandra Brucet; Eti E. Levi; Tuba Bucak; Gizem Bezirci; Arda Özen; Liselotte S. Johansson; Erik Jeppesen; Meryem Beklioglu

In warm lakes, fish aggregate within macrophytes, thereby weakening the role of these as a daytime refuge for zooplankton and altering the zooplankton size structure, predation pressure, and water clarity. To elucidate the role of macrophytes as a refuge for zooplankton and their effect on zooplankton size distribution, we established three sets of strandardized artificial plant beds in 11 lakes in Turkey with contrasting fish predation risk and turbidity. Zooplankton were sampled within and outside of each plant beds during day and night. Fish, collected overnight in multimesh-sized gillnets, were abundant both inside and outside the artificial plant beds, impoverishing the usefulness of plants as a daytime refuge for particularly large-bodied zooplankton. Zooplankton size diversity was negatively related to fish abundance. Diel vertical migration was the frequent anti-predator avoidance behavior, but reverse migration was also observed when Chaoborus was present. In contrast to the small-bodied taxa, large- and medium-sized taxa showed intraspecific size-based migration (i.e., individuals of different sizes had different migration patterns). Predators influenced the size structure and diel movement of zooplankton, but the response changed with the size of zooplankton and water clarity.


Hydrobiologia | 2016

Fish assemblage and diversity in lakes of western and central Turkey: role of geo-climatic and other environmental variables

Thomas Boll; Eti E. Levi; Gizem Bezirci; Müfit Özuluğ; Ayşe İdil Çakıroğlu; Seval Özcan; Sandra Brucet; Erik Jeppesen; Meryem Beklioglu

Abstract We conducted a fish survey in 40 lakes in western and central Turkey. Fifty species (one to eleven per lake) were recorded, including eighteen endemic and seven alien species. We investigated which local geo-climatic and other environmental variables shaped the fish assemblages. Altitude and temperature turned out to be the most important factors for total species richness as well as richness of omnivorous and zooplanktivorous species and the Shannon–Wiener diversity index, with more species and higher diversity occurring in the warmer lowland lakes. Altitude may affect the fish assemblage directly through dispersal limitation or indirectly by creating a gradient in temperature with which it was strongly correlated. Cyprinidae was the most species-rich and widespread family. Atherinidae, Gobiidae, and Mugilidae (families of marine origin) were mainly found in the lowland regions, while Salmonidae exclusively appeared in the high-altitude lakes. The presence of widely distributed translocated native and alien species revealed a large human impact on the fish assemblages, potentially threatening the rich endemic fish fauna in lakes in this region.


Journal of Paleolimnology | 2014

Relatedness between contemporary and subfossil cladoceran assemblages in Turkish lakes

A. İdil Çakıroğlu; Ü. Nihan Tavşanoğlu; Eti E. Levi; Thomas A. Davidson; Tuba Bucak; Arda Özen; Gürçay K. Akyıldız; Erik Jeppesen; Meryem Beklioglu

Cladocerans are valuable indicators of environmental change in lakes. Their fossils provide information on past changes in lake environments. However, few studies have quantitatively examined the relationships between contemporary and sub-fossil cladoceran assemblages and no investigations are available from Mediterranean lakes where salinity, eutrophication and top-down control of large-bodied cladocerans are known to be important. Here we compared contemporary Cladocera assemblages, sampled in summer, from both littoral and pelagic zones, with their sub-fossil remains from surface sediment samples from 40 Turkish, mainly shallow, lakes. A total of 20 and 27 taxa were recorded in the contemporary and surface sediment samples, respectively. Procrustes rotation was applied to both the principal components analysis (PCA) and redundancy analysis (RDA) ordinations in order to explore the relationship between the cladoceran community and the environmental variables. Procrustes rotation analysis based on PCA showed a significant accord between both littoral and combined pelagic–littoral contemporary and sedimentary assemblages. RDA ordinations indicated that a similar proportion of variance was explained by environmental variation for the contemporary and fossil Cladocera data. Total phosphorus and salinity were significant explanatory variables for the contemporary assemblage, whereas salinity emerged as the only significant variable for the sedimentary assemblage. The residuals from the Procrustes rotation identified a number of lakes with a high degree of dissimilarity between modern and sub-fossil assemblages. Analysis showed that high salinity, deep water and high macrophyte abundance were linked to a lower accord between contemporary and sedimentary assemblages. This low accord was, generally the result of poor representation of some salinity tolerant, pelagic and macrophyte-associated taxa in the contemporary samples. This study provides further confirmation that there is a robust relationship between samples of modern cladoceran assemblages and their sedimentary remains. Thus, sub-fossil cladoceran assemblages from sediment cores can be used with confidence to track long-term changes in this environmentally sensitive group and in Mediterranean lakes, subjected to large inter-annual variation in water level, salinity and nutrients.


Science of The Total Environment | 2017

Future water availability in the largest freshwater Mediterranean lake is at great risk as evidenced from simulations with the SWAT model

Tuba Bucak; Dennis Trolle; Hans Estrup Andersen; Hans Thodsen; Şeyda Erdoğan; Eti E. Levi; Nur Filiz; Erik Jeppesen; Meryem Beklioglu

Inter- and intra-annual water level fluctuations and changes in water flow regime are intrinsic characteristics of Mediterranean lakes. Additionally, considering climate change projections for the water-limited Mediterranean region, increased air temperatures and decreased precipitation are anticipated, leading to dramatic declines in lake water levels as well as severe water scarcity problems. The study site, Lake Beyşehir, the largest freshwater lake in the Mediterranean basin, is - like other Mediterranean lakes - threatened by climatic changes and over-abstraction of water for irrigated crop farming. Therefore, implementation of strict water level management policies is required. In this study, an integrated modeling approach was used to predict the future water levels of Lake Beyşehir in response to potential future changes in climate and land use. Water level estimation was performed by linking the catchment model Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) with a Support Vector Regression model (ε-SVR). The projected increase in temperature and decrease in precipitation based on the climate change models led to an enhanced potential evapotranspiration and reduced total runoff. On the other hand, the effects of various land use scenarios within the catchment appeared to be comparatively insignificant. According to the ε-SVR model results, changes in hydrological processes caused a water level reduction for all scenarios. Moreover, the MPI-ESM-MR General Circulation Model outputs produced the most dramatic results by predicting that Lake Beyşehir may dry out by the 2040s with the current outflow regime. The results indicate that shallow Mediterranean lakes may face a severe risk of drying out and losing their ecosystem values in the near future if the current intensity of water abstraction is not reduced. In addition, the results also demonstrate that outflow management and sustainable use of water sources are vital to sustain lake ecosystems in water-limited regions.


Nanotoxicology | 2016

Food web effects of titanium dioxide nanoparticles in an outdoor freshwater mesocosm experiment

Boris Jovanović; Gizem Bezirci; Ali Serhan Çağan; Jan Coppens; Eti E. Levi; Zehra Oluz; Eylül Tuncel; Hatice Duran; Meryem Beklioglu

Abstract Over the course of 78 days, nine outdoor mesocosms, each with 1350 L capacity, were situated on a pontoon platform in the middle of a lake and exposed to 0 μg L−1 TiO2, 25 μg L−1 TiO2 or 250 μg L−1 TiO2 nanoparticles in the form of E171 TiO2 human food additive five times a week. Mesocosms were inoculated with sediment, phytoplankton, zooplankton, macroinvertebrates, macrophytes and fish before exposure, ensuring a complete food web. Physicochemical parameters of the water, nutrient concentrations, and biomass of the taxa were monitored. Concentrations of 25 μg L−1 TiO2 and 250 μg L−1 TiO2 caused a reduction in available soluble reactive phosphorus in the mesocosms by 15 and 23%, respectively, but not in the amount of total phosphorus. The biomass of Rotifera was significantly reduced by 32 and 57% in the TiO2 25 μg L−1 and TiO2 250 μg L−1 treatments, respectively, when compared to the control; however, the biomass of the other monitored groups—Cladocera, Copepoda, phytoplankton, macrophytes, chironomids and fish—remained unaffected. In conclusion, environmentally relevant concentrations of TiO2 nanoparticles may negatively affect certain parameters and taxa of the freshwater lentic aquatic ecosystem. However, these negative effects are not significant enough to affect the overall function of the ecosystem, as there were no cascade effects leading to a major change in its trophic state or primary production.


Hydrobiologia | 2014

Water level and fish-mediated cascading effects on the microbial community in eutrophic warm shallow lakes: a mesocosm experiment

Arda Özen; Tuba Bucak; Ayşe İdil Çakıroğlu; Eti E. Levi; Jan Coppens; Erik Jeppesen; Meryem Beklioglu

Information on the effects of water level changes on microbial planktonic communities in lakes is limited but vital for understanding ecosystem dynamics in Mediterranean lakes subjected to major intra- and inter-annual variations in water level. We performed an in situ mesocosm experiment in an eutrophic Turkish lake at two different depths crossed with presence/absence of fish in order to explore the effects of water level variations and the role of top-down regulation at contrasting depths. Strong effects of fish were found on zooplankton, weakening through the food chain to ciliates, HNF and bacterioplankton, whereas the effect of water level variations was overall modest. Presence of fish resulted in lower biomass of zooplankton and higher biomasses of phytoplankton, ciliates and total plankton. The cascading effects of fish were strongest in the shallow mesocosms as evidenced by a lower zooplankton contribution to total plankton biomass and lower zooplankton:ciliate and HNF:bacteria biomass ratios. Our results suggest that a lowering of the water level in warm shallow lakes will enhance the contribution of bacteria, HNF and ciliates to the plankton biomass, likely due to increased density of submerged macrophytes (less phytoplankton); this effect will, however, be less pronounced in the presence of fish.


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

Impact of alternating wet and dry periods on long-term seasonal phosphorus and nitrogen budgets of two shallow Mediterranean lakes

Jan Coppens; Arda Özen; Ü. Nihan Tavşanoğlu; Şeyda Erdoğan; Eti E. Levi; Ceylan Yozgatligil; Erik Jeppesen; Meryem Beklioglu

The water balance, with large seasonal and annual water level fluctuations, has a critical influence on the nitrogen and phosphorus dynamics of shallow lakes in the semi-arid climate zone. We constructed seasonal water and nutrient budgets for two connected shallow lakes, Lakes Mogan and Eymir, located in Central Anatolia, Turkey. The study period covered 20years with alternations between dry and wet years as well as restoration efforts including sewage effluent diversion and biomanipulations in Lake Eymir. Both lakes experienced a 1-2m water level drop during a drought period and a subsequent increase during the wet period, with seasonal water level fluctuations of 0.60 to 0.70m. During wet years with high water levels, small seasonal differences were observed with a nutrient peak in spring caused by external loading and nutrient loss via retention during summer. During years with low water levels, nutrient concentrations increased due to internal and external loading, exacerbated by evaporative water loss. In Lake Eymir, a shift to eutrophic conditions with turbid water occurred under low water level conditions and consequent internal loading of P from the sediment, causing high nutrient concentrations in summer. Our results indicate a threat of lakes drying out in the semi-arid climate zone if evaporation increases and precipitation decreases as anticipated from the global climate change predictions. In addition, our results show the influence of the water balance on the eutrophication of shallow lakes in the Mediterranean climate zone and highlight the ultimate consequences for lake management.


Hydrobiologia | 2018

Patterns of microbial food webs in Mediterranean shallow lakes with contrasting nutrient levels and predation pressures

Arda Özen; Ayşe İdil Çakıroğlu; Eti E. Levi; Erik Jeppesen; Meryem Beklioglu

Abstract To elucidate the specific and combined effects of bottom-up and top-down control on the microbial community in warm lakes, we sampled microbial community along with physical–chemical and biological variables and performed in situ food web experiments, in 14 Turkish shallow lakes with contrasting nutrient levels and predation pressures. Our field results revealed that differences in microbial communities correlated with differences in zooplankton community structure, temperature (increasing nutrient concentrations, change in zooplankton composition), nutrient concentrations (increasing bacteria and heterotrophic nanoflagellate abundances with increasing nitrogen concentrations and temperature) and macrophyte coverage (ciliates as potential consumers of bacteria and HNF was strongest in macrophyte-dominated lakes). Our in situ experimental study revealed that the zooplankton not only affect the biomass and composition of microbial communities but also alter the microbial structure and trophic relationships. Our results therefore indicate that both bottom-up factors and top-down effects were important for the efficiency of the carbon transfer from bacteria to higher trophic levels in the study lakes. Due to an anticipated increase in eutrophication, temperature and alteration of the classical food web with climate warming, major changes in the microbial community of lakes are, therefore, expected in a warmer future in semi-arid Mediterranean climatic regions.


Freshwater Biology | 2012

The influence of water level on macrophyte growth and trophic interactions in eutrophic Mediterranean shallow lakes: a mesocosm experiment with and without fish

Tuba Bucak; Ece Saraoğlu; Eti E. Levi; Ü. Nihan Tavşanoğlu; A. İdİl Çakiroğlu; Erik Jeppesen; Meryem Beklioğlu


Freshwater Biology | 2014

Similarity between contemporary vegetation and plant remains in the surface sediment in Mediterranean lakes

Eti E. Levi; Ayşe İdil Çakıroğlu; Tuba Bucak; Bent Vad Odgaard; Thomas A. Davidson; Erik Jeppesen; Meryem Beklioglu

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Meryem Beklioglu

Middle East Technical University

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Ayşe İdil Çakıroğlu

Middle East Technical University

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Tuba Bucak

Middle East Technical University

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Arda Özen

Middle East Technical University

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Gizem Bezirci

Middle East Technical University

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Jan Coppens

Middle East Technical University

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Ü. Nihan Tavşanoğlu

Middle East Technical University

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Şeyda Erdoğan

Middle East Technical University

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