Indirect upstream effects of dams: Consequences of migratory consumer extirpation in Puerto Rico

被引:88
作者
Greathouse, EA [1 ]
Pringle, CM
McDowell, WH
Holmquist, JG
机构
[1] Univ Georgia, Inst Ecol, Athens, GA 30605 USA
[2] Univ New Hampshire, Dept Nat Resources, Durham, NH 03824 USA
[3] Univ Calif White Mt Res Stn, Bishop, CA 93514 USA
关键词
amphidromy; benthic invertebrates; Decapoda; fishes; freshwater shrimps; migratory fauna; natural experiment; omnivorous macrobiota; primary consumer; tropical stream;
D O I
10.1890/05-0243
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Large dams degrade the integrity of a wide variety of ecosystems, yet direct downstream effects of dams have received the most attention from ecosystem managers and researchers. We investigated indirect upstream effects of darns resulting from decimation of migratory freshwater shrimp and fish populations in Puerto Rico, USA, in both high- and low-gradient streams. In high-gradient streams above large dams, native shrimps and fishes were extremely rare, whereas similar sites without large dams had high abundances of native consumers. Losses of native fauna above dams dramatically altered their basal food resources and assemblages of invertebrate competitors and prey. Compared to pools in high-gradient streams with no large dams, pool epilithon above dams had nine times more algal biomass, 20 times more fine benthic organic matter (FBOM), 65 times more fine benthic inorganic matter. (FBIM), 28 times more carbon, 19 times more nitrogen, and four times more non-decapod invertebrate biomass. High-gradient riffles upstream from large dams had five times more FBIM than did undammed riffles but showed no difference in algal abundance, FBOM, or non-decapod invertebrate biomass. For epilithon of low-gradient streams, differences in basal resources between pools above large dams vs. without large dams were considerably smaller in magnitude than those observed for pools in high-gradient sites. These results match previous stream experiments in which the strength of native shrimp and fish effects increased with stream gradient. Our results demonstrate that darns can indirectly affect upstream free-flowing reaches by eliminating strong top-down effects of consumers. Migratory omnivorous shrimps and fishes occur throughout the tropics, and the consequences of their declines upstream from many tropical dams are likely to be similar to those in Puerto Rico. Thus, ecological effects of migratory fauna loss upstream from dams encompass a wider variety of species interactions and biomes than the bottom-up, effects (i.e., elimination of salmonid nutrient subsidies) recognized for northern temperate systems.
引用
收藏
页码:339 / 352
页数:14
相关论文
共 101 条
[21]  
2
[22]   The impact of low-head dams on fish species richness in Wisconsin, USA [J].
Cumming, GS .
ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, 2004, 14 (05) :1495-1506
[23]   Ecology - Dammed experiments! [J].
Diamond, J .
SCIENCE, 2001, 294 (5548) :1847-1848
[24]  
Diamond J., 1986, Community Ecology, P3
[25]  
DUDGEON D., 1999, Tropical Asian streams
[26]   Ecology of the coporo, Prochilodus mariae (Characiformes, Prochilodontidae), and status of annual migrations in western Venezuela [J].
Duque, AB ;
Taphorn, DC ;
Winemiller, KO .
ENVIRONMENTAL BIOLOGY OF FISHES, 1998, 53 (01) :33-46
[27]   Intercontinental similarities in riparian-plant diversity and sensitivity to river regulation [J].
Dynesius, M ;
Jansson, R ;
Johansson, ME ;
Nilsson, C .
ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, 2004, 14 (01) :173-191
[28]   The impact of changing flow regimes on riparian vegetation and the riparian species Mimulus guttatus [J].
Elderd, BD .
ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, 2003, 13 (06) :1610-1625
[29]  
Erdman D.S., 1984, P162
[30]   Distribution of migratory fishes and shrimps along multivariate gradients in tropical island streams [J].
Fièvet, E ;
Dolédec, S ;
Lim, P .
JOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY, 2001, 59 (02) :390-402