Ecological evaluation of air and water habitats in the Great Cavern of Santo Tomás, Cuba

Authors

  • Janez Mulec Mulec
  • Andreea Oarga

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7550/rmb.43334

Keywords:

monitoring, microbial indicators, underground water, meiofauna, aerobiology.

Abstract

Air and water habitats in the Great Cavern of Santo Tomás were investigated using cultivable indicatormicrobial groups. In addition, cave pools were sampled to evaluate the biomass and diversity of aquatic meiofauna.In the climatically dynamic entrance part named Cueva de las Antorchas, concentrations of total cultivable airbornebacteria ranged from 2 to 15 CFU/20 cm2/20 min, and of airborne yeasts and moulds from 2 to 23 CFU/20 cm2/20min. Different pools fed by constant percolation water or occasional underground floods were sampled. Microbialindicators of water habitats (total bacteria, coliforms, Escherichia coli, Enterobacteriaceae) showed that microbialload very likely depended on the sampling position in the vertical transection of the cave system and closeness to theentrance. During the underground flow of Santo Tomás Stream through the cave system, the concentration of isolatestypical for E. coli was reduced from 56 CFU/ml at the ponor in Valle de Santo Tomás to a concentration below thedetection limit at the spring in Valle de Quemado. In some cave pools, apart from microorganisms, aquatic faunacontribute highly to the total biomass. Investigation for aquatic meiofauna diversity in cave pools revealed relativehigh abundances of copepods and ostracods.

Published

2015-01-14

Issue

Section

ECOLOGÍA