Luz Allende
University of Buenos Aires
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Featured researches published by Luz Allende.
Hydrobiologia | 2004
Haydée Pizarro; Luz Allende; Stella Maris Bonaventura
We studied the structural characteristics of the littoral epilithon in nine lentic water bodies at Hope Bay, Antarctic Peninsula, during summer 2002. At each site we measured the main physical and chemical variables and took epilithic samples for the analysis of dry weigh, ash, ash-free dry weight and chlorophyll a concentration. Distance from the sea of each water body was also considered. One site was selected for sampling lakes and ponds, except for Boeckella lake, where two sampling sites (A and B) were selected due to the heterogeneity of its littoral zone. Three stones for chlorophyll a analysis and another three to estimate dry weight, ash and ash-free dry weight, were taken randomly about 1 m away from the shore-line of each sampling site. Measurements of physical and chemical characteristics were obtained similarly. Water samples for chemical analysis were taken sub-superficially. Lakatos’s system of classification and the Autotrophic Index were used to make functional inferences about the epilithic communities. Two PCA analyses were made to classify the water bodies according to environmental features and epilithic variables. In the latter, major patterns in data of epilithon were subsequently interpreted based on environmental data using external validation. Pingüi pond, located in the middle of the penguin rookery, was considered as a passive sample in both PCA analyses due to its extreme characteristics. Limnological features of the studied water bodies were similar to those of other Maritime Antarctic lakes. According to the Lakatos’s index, 60% of the sampled lakes had high epilithic mass and a same proportion showed an inorganic type of epilithon The fact that 40% of the water bodies were autotrophic confirmed the importance of benthos as primary producer. According to environmental features, the well-defined groups of lakes emerged from the PCA were mainly determined by distance from the sea, pH, conductivity and salinity, and corresponded to the principal hydrological basins found in the region. Based on the results of the second PCA, littoral epilithon was affected by nitrate concentration and conductivity. In this ordination, water bodies from the same hydrological basin were separated probably as a result of a very complex inter-play of factors with a site-specific response to particular microhabitat characteristics.
Hydrobiologia | 2015
María Laura Sánchez; Leonardo Lagomarsino; Luz Allende; Irina Izaguirre
We analysed the changes in phytoplankton and in the main limnological features in a shallow lake during its transition from a clear-vegetated regime to a turbid one from 2005 to 2013. As samplings were discontinuous, data were analysed considering three different sampling periods. At the beginning of the first period, the lake was in a clear-vegetated regime, showing low values of chlorophyll a, KdPAR, total suspended solids and nutrients, and high Secchi depth. Phytoplankton was dominated by nano-phytoplanktonic species. During the second period, some evidences of the shift to a turbid regime were observed (mainly in KdPAR and total suspended solids). Towards the end of our study, submerged macrophytes sharply declined; in this period KdPAR and total suspended solids noticeably increased, whereas a significant reduction in Secchi depth occurred. Concomitantly, phytoplankton abundance augmented in two orders of magnitude, changing to a community with a higher proportion of micro-phytoplankton. Although the causes of the regimen shift could not be unequivocally assessed, the drastic reduction in the hydrometric level of the lake probably provoked a declination in macrophytes, with the consequent increase of nutrients in the water column and the increment in phytoplankton densities, carrying the system towards a turbid regime.
Polar Biology | 2013
Luz Allende; Gabriela Mataloni
Phytoplankton communities dominating Musgos and Papúa ponds with differing trophic states were sampled over 3 days enabling the detection of the physiological and population responses of microalgae to short-scale changes in biotic and abiotic factors, rather than frequently analyzed changes in community composition responses to long-scale environmental changes. We hypothesized that both environments undergoing diel changes would be dominated by phytoplankton with generalist strategies, while community structure would be mostly dictated by the trophic state of each water body. The phytoplankton biovolumes of both ponds were strongly dominated by euplanktonic nanoflagellated Chlorophyta, while phycocyanin-rich picocyanobacteria dominated the picophytoplankton. Parallel diel cycles of air and water temperatures were more pronounced on a sunny, warm day which prompted algal photosynthesis, revealed by strong increases in dissolved oxygen and pH. Nutrient and phytoplanktonic chlorophyll a confirmed the hypertrophic condition of Papúa pond. This accounted for the distinct community composition encountered in each pond, which remained stable throughout the study, as revealed by the SIMI index. The inverse relationship between the chl a/abundance ratio and the abundances of dominant species together with varying net growth rates (k′) showed algal reproduction, yet densities remained rather stable in both cases. In Musgos pond, fluctuations in k′ for small and median ciliates shadowed those of pico- and nanophytoplankton, respectively, strongly suggesting that they can control algal growth in these 2-level trophic chains.
Hydrobiologia | 2009
Luz Allende; Guillermo Tell; Horacio Zagarese; Ana Torremorell; Gonzalo L. Pérez; José Bustingorry; Roberto Escaray; Irina Izaguirre
Hydrobiologia | 2016
Irina Izaguirre; Juan F. Saad; M. Romina Schiaffino; Alicia Vinocur; Guillermo Tell; María Laura Sánchez; Luz Allende; Rodrigo Sinistro
Polar Biology | 2004
Pablo Almada; Luz Allende; Guillermo Tell; Irina Izaguirre
Polar Biology | 2006
Luz Allende; Haydée Pizarro
Journal of Limnology | 2014
Luciana Avigliano; Alicia Vinocur; Griselda Chaparro; Guillermo Tell; Luz Allende
Hydrobiologia | 2015
Rodrigo Sinistro; María Laura Sánchez; Fernando Unrein; M. Romina Schiaffino; Irina Izaguirre; Luz Allende
Polar Biology | 2012
Irina Izaguirre; Haydée Pizarro; Luz Allende; Fernando Unrein; Patricia Rodriguez; María Cristina Marinone; Guillermo Tell