Freshwater fish condition responses to hydrological disturbance are species- and scale dependent.

IF 1.7 3区 农林科学 Q2 FISHERIES
Maxwell C Mallett, Jason D Thiem, Gavin L Butler, Luke Carpenter-Bundhoo, Mark J Kennard
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Abstract

Modification of river flows is a major cause of freshwater fish population declines in many parts of the world. Identifying the precise mechanisms of these declines represents a significant challenge, as a range of stressors can simultaneously impact various components of fish health, fitness and population dynamics. Here we investigate the role of river flows and other biophysical factors on spatio-temporal variation in freshwater fish body condition in Australia's highly modified Murray-Darling Basin using three widely distributed native (Murray cod Maccullochella peelii, golden perch Macquaria ambigua and bony herring Nematalosa erebi) and one introduced (common carp Cyprinus carpio) species. Our aim was to uncover drivers of spatio-temporal variation in fish condition at two spatial extents: at the basin scale, utilising a flow regime disturbance index, and at the river-valley scale, employing individual flow gauge data to assess responses in fish condition to multiple measures of antecedent (365 day) flow. Linear mixed effects modelling revealed that at the basin scale, M. peelii and M. ambigua were in better condition in rivers with lower flow regime disturbance, and temporal trends in the condition of N. erebi, C. carpio and M. peelii reflected boom and bust dynamics related to wet and dry climate periods. At the river-valley scale, mean antecedent daily flow magnitude was significantly positively related to the condition of M. peelii, M. ambigua and C. carpio, whereas the number of high-flow days was negatively related to condition of N. erebi. Our study demonstrates that a simple body condition index calculated from routinely collected length-weight data is sensitive to multiple measures of hydrological disturbance in river systems that experience substantial temporal and spatial variability. We emphasise that studies considering multiple spatial scales are important for understanding complex scale-dependent mechanisms influencing fish condition.

淡水鱼对水文干扰的状态响应取决于物种和规模。
在世界许多地区,河流流量的改变是淡水鱼数量减少的主要原因。确定这些下降的确切机制是一项重大挑战,因为一系列压力源可以同时影响鱼类健康、适应性和种群动态的各个组成部分。本文研究了河流流量等生物物理因素对澳大利亚墨累-达令盆地淡水鱼体状态时空变化的影响,研究对象为分布广泛的墨累鳕鱼(Maccullochella peelii)、金鲈鱼(Macquaria ambigua)和硬骨鲱鱼Nematalosa erebi)和引进鲤鱼(Cyprinus carpio)。我们的目标是在两个空间范围内揭示鱼类状态时空变化的驱动因素:在流域尺度上,利用流量状态干扰指数;在河谷尺度上,利用单个流量测量数据来评估鱼类状态对多个先前(365天)流量测量的反应。线性混合效应模拟结果表明,在流域尺度上,在流势扰动较小的河流中,褐皮草和双歧草的生长状况较好,且褐皮草、卡皮草和褐皮草生长状况的时间趋势反映了与干湿气候期相关的消长动态。在河谷尺度上,平均前日流量与褐皮草、双峰草和卡皮草的状况呈显著正相关,而高流量日数与褐皮草的状况呈显著负相关。我们的研究表明,从常规收集的长度-重量数据中计算出的简单身体状况指数对经历大量时空变化的河流系统水文干扰的多种措施很敏感。我们强调,考虑多个空间尺度的研究对于理解影响鱼类状况的复杂尺度依赖机制非常重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of fish biology
Journal of fish biology 生物-海洋与淡水生物学
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
10.00%
发文量
292
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Fish Biology is a leading international journal for scientists engaged in all aspects of fishes and fisheries research, both fresh water and marine. The journal publishes high-quality papers relevant to the central theme of fish biology and aims to bring together under one cover an overall picture of the research in progress and to provide international communication among researchers in many disciplines with a common interest in the biology of fish.
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