Fishes move to transient local refuges, not persistent landscape refuges during river drying experiment

被引:5
作者
Archdeacon, Thomas P. [1 ]
Gonzales, Eric J. [2 ]
Yackulic, Charles B. [3 ]
机构
[1] US Fish & Wildlife Serv, New Mexico Fish & Wildlife Conservat Off, Albuquerque, NM 87103 USA
[2] US Bur Reclamat, Environm & Lands Div, Albuquerque Area Off, Albuquerque, NM USA
[3] US Geol Survey, Grand Canyon Monitoring & Res Ctr, Southwest Biol Sci Ctr, Flagstaff, AZ USA
关键词
behaviour; drought; flow intermittency; resilience; resistance; MIDDLE RIO-GRANDE; FRESH-WATER FISH; INTERMITTENT-STREAM; CLIMATE-CHANGE; FLOW EVENTS; NEW-MEXICO; DROUGHT; STRATEGIES; HABITAT; ASSEMBLAGES;
D O I
10.1111/fwb.14246
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
1. Anthropogenically driven flow intermittency is increasing in freshwater streams, with important implications for the management and conservation of aquatic ecosystems. Because most freshwater fishes are mobile, they are expected to emigrate from intermittent reaches, but this may not be true in streams transitioning from perennial to intermittent. Here, we attempt to determine if riverine fishes vacate drying reaches before intermittency or remain in local refuges. 2. We implemented a controlled, in situ experimental flow reduction resulting in intermittency, reducing flows from similar to 1.0 to 0 m(3)/s over a 3-week period. We monitored fish and fish-habitat changes over a 5-week period before, during and after flow reductions. 3. During flow reductions, total wetted habitat was ultimately reduced by 91%. Habitat loss over time was not equal among habitat types: pool habitat increased slightly as run habit was lost, and backwater and isolated pool habitats were not strongly related to discharge. Likewise, water depth in run habitats decreased faster than other habitats. 4. Only the river carpsucker Carpiodes carpio appeared to move upstream during flow recession; seven other species remained within drying sites. Habitat loss negatively affected fish populations, but at a lower rate than that at which habitat was lost, until sites dried completely. Overall, two species, red shiner Cyprinella lutrensis and western mosquitofish Gambusia affinis, had increased population growth during the study, whereas the remaining species had population declines. 5. Fishes were able to find transient local refuges during flow reductions but did not vacate sites before intermittent conditions. Accounting for lack of emigration from anthropogenic flow-intermittent reaches will be important for designing conservation actions for fishes threatened by increasing flow intermittency. Creation of refuge habitats may not be effective for widely dispersed species that do not actively seek refuge habitats, unless those habitats support enough individuals to maintain resilience following the intermittent conditions.
引用
收藏
页码:792 / 808
页数:17
相关论文
共 81 条
  • [1] Ecological correlates of fish movement in a network of Virginia streams
    Albanese, B
    Angermeier, PL
    Dorai-Raj, S
    [J]. CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES, 2004, 61 (06) : 857 - 869
  • [2] Does mobility explain variation in colonisation and population recovery among stream fishes?
    Albanese, Brett
    Angermeier, Paul L.
    Peterson, James T.
    [J]. FRESHWATER BIOLOGY, 2009, 54 (07) : 1444 - 1460
  • [3] Temperature increase and its effects on fish stress physiology in the context of global warming
    Alfonso, Sebastien
    Gesto, Manuel
    Sadoul, Bastien
    [J]. JOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY, 2021, 98 (06) : 1496 - 1508
  • [4] Rapid colonisation post-displacement contributes to native fish resilience
    Alford, Samantha L.
    Walters, Annika W.
    [J]. ECOLOGY OF FRESHWATER FISH, 2022, 31 (02) : 347 - 357
  • [5] Effects of habitat fragmentation on effective population size in the endangered Rio Grande silvery minnow
    Alò, D
    Turner, TF
    [J]. CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, 2005, 19 (04) : 1138 - 1148
  • [6] Hatchery supplementation increases potential spawning stock of Rio Grande Silvery Minnow after population bottlenecks
    Archdeacon, Thomas P.
    Dudley, Robert K.
    Remshardt, W. Jason
    Knight, William
    Ulibarri, Manuel
    Gonzales, Eric J.
    [J]. TRANSACTIONS OF THE AMERICAN FISHERIES SOCIETY, 2023, 152 (02) : 187 - 200
  • [7] Effects of flow recession regime on stranding of Rio Grande silvery minnow suggests that conservation actions must overcome evolutionary traps
    Archdeacon, Thomas P.
    Gonzales, Eric J.
    Thomas, Lyle, I
    Rudolph, Ashlee B.
    Bachus, Jennifer A.
    [J]. AQUATIC CONSERVATION-MARINE AND FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEMS, 2022, 32 (11) : 1817 - 1829
  • [8] Movement of Red Shiner during a regulated, intentional surface-flow recession
    Archdeacon, Thomas P.
    Gonzales, Eric J.
    Thomas, Lyle, I
    [J]. ECOLOGY OF FRESHWATER FISH, 2022, 31 (02) : 358 - 368
  • [9] No quarter: Lack of refuge during flow intermittency results in catastrophic mortality of an imperiled minnow
    Archdeacon, Thomas P.
    Reale, Justin K.
    [J]. FRESHWATER BIOLOGY, 2020, 65 (12) : 2108 - 2123
  • [10] Effects of seining effort and site length on variability of small-bodied fish catch-rates in a sand-bed river
    Archdeacon, Thomas P.
    Reale, Justin K.
    Gonzales, Eric J.
    Grant, Joshua D.
    [J]. RIVER RESEARCH AND APPLICATIONS, 2020, 36 (08) : 1588 - 1597