Zooplankton response to flooding of a drought refuge and implications for the endangered fish species Craterocephalus fluviatilis cohabiting with alien Gambusia holbrooki
Autor: | Russell J. Shiel, Karl A. Hillyard, Scotte D. Wedderburn |
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Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: |
biology
Ecology media_common.quotation_subject fungi Endangered species food and beverages Juvenile fish Aquatic Science Plankton biology.organism_classification Craterocephalus fluviatilis Zooplankton Competition (biology) Gambusia Fishery Population decline Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics media_common |
Zdroj: | Aquatic Ecology. 47:263-275 |
ISSN: | 1573-5125 1386-2588 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10452-013-9442-3 |
Popis: | Disruption to a river’s natural flow regime changes its ecological character, which becomes unfavourable for previously adapted biota. The zooplankton particularly are affected, and survival of larval and juvenile fish is largely determined by their availability. Alien fishes can also impact on recruitment in native fishes, sometimes through competition. In this regard, the invasive eastern Gambusia Gambusia holbrooki is linked to the decline of several fish species. It can have a substantial influence in shaping plankton communities, which implies that it competes with native fish that rely on the microfauna. The effects of river regulation and over abstraction of water in the Murray–Darling Basin, south-eastern Australia, were exacerbated by drought from 1997 to 2010. Consequently, the endangered Murray hardyhead Craterocephalus fluviatilis underwent substantial population decline and extirpations. The purpose of this study is to determine if a link exists between zooplankton response to flooding of a drought refuge and the recruitment success of C. fluviatilis in the presence of G. holbrooki. Flooding triggered sharp and substantial increases in the zooplankton and their eggs, which was the sole food of C. fluviatilis. This apparently benefitted the recruitment of C. fluviatilis, and sometimes alleviated diet overlap with G. holbrooki. Conversely, the zooplankton in a nearby non-flooded refuge was low in abundance and diversity, and all fish species were extirpated. The findings indicate that the flooding of drought refugia with relatively small volumes of water can be timed with ecological cues that would otherwise be desynchronized in highly regulated rivers, particularly during drought. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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