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Dive into the research topics where Joan Gomà is active.

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Featured researches published by Joan Gomà.


Hydrobiologia | 2005

Diatom communities and water quality assessment in Mountain Rivers of the upper Segre basin (La Cerdanya, Oriental Pyrenees)

Joan Gomà; Frédéric Rimet; Jaume Cambra; Lucien Hoffmann; Luc Ector

Epilithic diatoms of mountain rivers from the upper Segre catchment (Oriental Pyrenees) were studied in 1998, during three different seasons: March, July and September. Four rivers, the river Segre and its three most important tributaries, Duran, Molina and Querol, were sampled in upstream and downstream stretches. The diatom communities were comparable in all upstream stretches of these mountain rivers draining siliceous substrates. Dominant taxa were Achnanthidium subatomus, Diatoma mesodon, Encyonema cf. minutum, E. silesiacum, Fragilaria arcus, F. capucina, Gomphonema calcifugum, G. pumilum, Meridion circulare and Nitzschia pura. Changes in water quality in the downstream stretches lead to the appearance of pollution tolerant taxa, such as Eolimna minima, Gomphoneis minuta, Navicula gregaria, and Nitzschia inconspicua. As a result, the values obtained with the diatom water quality indices (IPS Specific Polluosensitivity Index, CEE and IBD Biological Diatom Index) decreased. The diatom community composition and the derived water quality values did not change in the upstream stretches over the year. In contrast, significant changes were observed in the downstream stretches with best water␣quality in July, during high flows due to melting snow, and worst values in September, during low␣discharge. The diatom indices, especially the IPS, showed a good performance in these mountain rivers.


Diatom Research | 2007

Benthic diatoms in Western European streams with altitudes above 800 m: characterisation of the main assemblages and correspondence with ecoregions

F. Rimet; Joan Gomà; Jaume Cambra; E. Bertuzzi; M. Cantonati; C. Cappelletti; F. Ciutti; A. Cordonier; M. Coste; F. Delmas; J. Tison; Loïc Tudesque; H. Vidal; Luc Ector

High altitude rivers in European mountains show a large diversity of benthic diatom assemblages. Diatoms were studied from rivers of the Alps, the Pyrenees, the Massif-Central and the Iberic system. The study area spread across four countries, Italy, France, Switzerland and Spain. Since 2000, the European Water Framework Directive (WFD) has required the assessment of stream quality using bioindicators and any deviation from reference conditions measured. References for each river type and for each bioindicator, such as diatoms, are in the process of being defined. System A is a typological system proposed by the WFD, in which ecoregions spread over several countries were defined. The first aim of this study was to assess the importance of these ecoregions for diatoms compared to other environmental factors. To reduce the heterogeneity of the diatom assemblages due to the river continuum and also pollution, only the rivers higher than 800 meters were selected. These rivers include a majority of sites that are only slightly polluted, or not at all. In total 261 sampling sites were considered from four ecoregions: the Iberic region, the Pyrenees, the Alps and the Western Highlands. The sampling sites were characterized by differences in geology, distance from the source and altitudes. Statistical analysis showed that geographic ecoregions of system A and geology were the most important environmental descriptors for diatoms. Distance from the source and altitude were less important and pollution was the least important parameter. The second aim was to describe and to typify the main diatom assemblages of these European mountains. Eight clusters gathered into four main groups were identified. Group I was mainly recorded in the Alps and the Pyrenees; group II had in common its close proximity to the source; group III was often found in the Western Highlands on crystalline geology, and group IV was present in all ecoregions and included weakly polluted streams. Some suggestions for the improvement of the ecoregions based on benthic diatoms were given in the conclusion.


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

Influence of global change-related impacts on the mercury toxicity of freshwater algal communities

Jonatan Val; Selene Muñiz; Joan Gomà; Enrique Navarro

The climatic-change related increase of temperatures, are expected to alter the distribution and survival of freshwater species, ecosystem functions, and also the effects of toxicants to aquatic biota. This study has thus assessed, as a first time, the modulating effect of climate-change drivers on the mercury (Hg) toxicity of freshwater algal photosynthesis. Natural benthic algal communities (periphyton) have been exposed to Hg under present and future temperature scenarios (rise of 5 °C). The modulating effect of other factors (also altered by global change), as the quality and amount of suspended and dissolved materials in the rivers, has been also assessed, exposing algae to Hg in natural river water or a synthetic medium. The EC50 values ranged from the 0.15-0.74 ppm for the most sensitive communities, to the 24-40 ppm for the most tolerant. The higher tolerance shown by communities exposed to higher Hg concentrations, as Jabarrella was in agreement with the Pollution Induced Community Tolerance concept. In other cases, the dominance of the invasive diatom Didymosphenia geminata explained the tolerance or sensitivity of the community to the Hg toxicity. Results shown that while increases in the suspended solids reduced Hg bioavailability, changes in the dissolved materials - such as organic carbon - may increase it and thus its toxic effects on biota. The impacts of the increase of temperatures on the toxicological behaviour of periphyton (combining both changes at species composition and physiological acclimation) would be certainly modulated by other effects at the land level (i.e., alterations in the amount and quality of dissolved and particulate substances arriving to the rivers).


Journal of Phycology | 2009

NITZSCHIA ALICAE SP. NOV. AND N. PURIFORMIS SP. NOV., NEW DIATOMS FROM EUROPEAN RIVERS AND COMPARISON WITH THE TYPE MATERIAL OF N. SUBLINEARIS AND N. PURA1

Daša Hlúbiková; Saúl Blanco; Elisa Falasco; Joan Gomà; Lucien Hoffmann; Luc Ector

Nitzschia sublinearis Hustedt and N. pura Hustedt are common oligosaprobic freshwater diatom species that frequently occur in diatom inventories, thus being important in water quality studies. Both are considered as species with overlapping diagnostic criteria in several floras, which is typical of the whole genus Nitzschia. The type material of Hustedt of N. sublinearis and N. pura was examined using LM and EM in order to document the range of variation within the type populations and to compare it with populations occurring in different European rivers. Detailed observations allowed recognition of two new freshwater diatom species: N. alicae sp. nov., occurring in mesotrophic up to eutrophic conditions, and N. puriformis sp. nov., mostly occurring in oligotrophic habitats, both in rivers and streams at middle and high altitudes. The most reliable taxonomic features that separate both new species from the most similar taxa are the density of fibulae and striae, valve shape, and valve width as well as the shape of areolae. Morphological examination of different populations indicates that N. puriformis is relatively common in European rivers and has been overlooked to date and confounded with N. pura by several researchers. By contrast, N. alicae has, to date, been collected only in Slovakia and Northern Italy, but with a high frequency of occurrence and sometimes in high abundance at sites.


Freshwater Biology | 2004

Continental-scale patterns of nutrient and fish effects on shallow lakes: synthesis of a pan-European mesocosm experiment

D Stephen; David Balayla; Eloy Bécares; S. E. Collings; Camino Fernández-Aláez; Margarita Fernández-Aláez; Carmen Ferriol; P Garcia; Joan Gomà; Mikael Gyllström; Lars-Anders Hansson; Jaana Hietala; Timo Kairesalo; Maria Rosa Miracle; Susana Romo; Juan Rueda; Annika Ståhl-Delbanco; Marie Svensson; Kirsi Vakkilainen; M Valentin; W.J. van de Bund; E. Van Donk; Eduardo Vicente; María‐José Villena; Brian Moss


Freshwater Biology | 2005

Does high nitrogen loading prevent clear‐water conditions in shallow lakes at moderately high phosphorus concentrations?

María González Sagrario; Erik Jeppesen; Joan Gomà; Martin Søndergaard; Jens Peder Jensen; Torben L. Lauridsen; Frank Landkildehus


Annales De Limnologie-international Journal of Limnology | 2007

Indicator taxa of benthic diatom communities: a case study in Mediterranean streams

Elisabet Tornés; Jaume Cambra; Joan Gomà; Manel Leira; R. Ortiz; Sergi Sabater


Aquatic Ecology | 2008

Effects of nutrients and fish on periphyton and plant biomass across a European latitudinal gradient

Eloy Bécares; Joan Gomà; Margarita Fernández-Aláez; Camino Fernández-Aláez; Susana Romo; Maria Rosa Miracle; Annika Ståhl-Delbanco; Lars-Anders Hansson; Mikael Gyllström; Wouter J. Van de Bund; Ellen Van Donk; Timo Kairesalo; Jaana Hietala; Debbie Stephen; David Balayla; Brian Moss


Freshwater Biology | 2007

Interaction between wind-induced seiches and convective cooling governs algal distribution in a canyon-shaped reservoir

Rafael Marcé; Claudia Feijoó; Enrique Navarro; Jaime Ordoñez; Joan Gomà; Joan Armengol


Vie et milieu | 2004

Water quality evaluation in catalonian Mediterranean rivers using epilithic diatoms as bioindicators

Joan Gomà; R. Ortiz; J. Cambrai; Luc Ector

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Susana Romo

University of Valencia

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Jaume Cambra

University of Barcelona

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Brian Moss

University of Liverpool

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