Incorporating Allelopathic Aquatic Macrophytes for Algal Control in Carroll Creek Linear Park in Frederick, Maryland
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Hood College Biology
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Biomedical and Environmental Science
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Abstract
Algal growth in Carroll Creek is an annual problem. A group in Frederick,
Maryland, Color on the Creek, installs aquatic macrophytes, including water lilies, each
year in an effort to partially inhibit algal growth by blocking sunlight at the water's
surface. This group does not, however, consider plants with possible allelopathic
tendencies towards algae. This research collected algae directly from Carroll Creek, as
well as Microcystis aeruginosa LE-3 cultured in the laboratory, and exposed them to
exudates of aquatic macrophytes with known allelopathic tendencies. The macrophytes
were Pistia stratiotes, (Water lettuce) Eichhornia crassipes (Water hyacinth) and
Saururus cernuus L (Lizard's tail). The algae in Carroll Creek was tested for its
maximum quantum yield, or photosynthetic ability, and the M aeruginosa was tested for
growth inhibition, as measured by average cell density. The results of the experiments
showed the exudate from water lettuce had a statistically significant (P≤0.05) allelopathic
effect on the Carroll Creek algae on the last day of testing (n=6, P=0.0084). Throughout
the nine days of experimentation, the maximum quantum yield during exposure to water
hyacinth exudate was significantly lower (P<0.05) than the yield response of the
excelsior-only control (n=9, P=0.026). None of the macrophytes had a statistically
significant effect on M. aeruginosa average cell density. Further research should be
done using different periods of exudate collection, as well as different concentrations of
exudate, before the allelopathic effects of these macrophytes can be discounted.
