New Zealand Journal of Botany abstracts
Aquatic macrophytes of Lake Rotopounamu, a montane volcanic lake in New Zealand
FRANCES B. MICHAELIS
C/o Fisheries Research Laboratory P.O. Box 951, Rotorua, New Zealand
Abstract Lake Rotopounamu (710 m a.s.l.) is located in red beech/kamahi forest in Tongariro National Park in the central North Island of New Zealand. The maximum depth of the lake is 7.9 m, and it has neutral pH (7.1), soft water, and a predominantly silty substrate. It probably alternates between warm thereimictic and polymictic. No exotic, aquatic macrophytes are present. Beds of sedges (including
Baumea rubiginosa (Spreng.) Boeck.) are patchy on the southern shores. Submerged communities have 2 zones: at 0.1-2.5 m deep a low growing, inshore community of
Myriophyllum pedunculatum Hook.f.,
Lilaeopsis lacustris Hill, and
Glossostigma elatinoides Benth. and at 2.5-7.9 m deep a characean algal community of
Nitella pseudoflabellata (Nordst.) Bailey and
N. leptostachys var.
leonhardii (R.D.W.) R.D.W. Three species of aquatic liverwort are also recorded. The absence of a tall macrophyte zone, found in many other New Zealand lakes, is discussed.
Keywords Lake Rotopounamu; New Zealand flora; aquatic vegetation; aquatic liverworts; aquatic environment; lakes
Received 1 June 1982; revision 6 October 1982
New Zealand Journal of Botany, 1983, Vol. 21 : 33-38
0028-825X/83/2101-0033$2.50/0 © Crown copyright 1983
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (750K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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