Disentangling multiple pressures on fish assemblages in large rivers
Autor: | Johannes Radinger, Christian Wolter, Petr Zajicek |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
Environmental Engineering Floodplain 010501 environmental sciences River rehabilitation Fish diversity Functional guilds Fish-based assessment Waterways Inland navigation 01 natural sciences Rivers Animals Humans Environmental Chemistry Waste Management and Disposal Population dynamics of fisheries Ecosystem 0105 earth and related environmental sciences Hydrology geography geography.geographical_feature_category 010604 marine biology & hydrobiology Water Pollution Fishes Channelized Biodiversity Pollution Siltation Habitat Guild Environmental science Species richness Environmental Monitoring |
Zdroj: | The science of the total environment, 627:1093-105 |
ISSN: | 0048-9697 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.01.307 |
Popis: | European large rivers are exposed to multiple human pressures and maintained as waterways for inland navigation. However, little is known on the dominance and interactions of multiple pressures in large rivers and in particular inland navigation has been ignored in multi-pressure analyzes so far. We determined the response of ten fish population metrics (FPM, related to densities of diagnostic guilds and biodiversity) to 11 prevailing pressures including navigation intensity at 76 sites in eight European large rivers. Thereby, we aimed to derive indicative FPM for the most influential pressures that can serve for fish-based assessments. Pressures' influences, impacts and interactions were determined for each FPM using bootstrapped regression tree models. Increased flow velocity, navigation intensity and the loss of floodplains had the highest influences on guild densities and biodiversity. Interactions between navigation intensity and loss of floodplains and between navigation intensity and increased flow velocity were most frequent, each affecting 80% of the FPM. Further, increased sedimentation, channelization, organic siltation, the presence of artificial embankments and the presence of barriers had strong influences on at least one FPM. Thereby, each FPM was influenced by up to five pressures. However, some diagnostic FPM could be derived: Species richness, Shannon and Simpson Indices, the Fish Region Index and lithophilic and psammophilic guilds specifically indicate rhithralisation of the potamal region of large rivers. Lithophilic, phytophilic and psammophilic guilds indicate disturbance of shoreline habitats through both (i) wave action induced by passing vessels and (ii) hydromorphological degradation of the river channel that comes along with inland navigation. In European large rivers, inland navigation constitutes a highly influential pressure that adds on top of the prevailing hydromorphological degradation. Therefore, river management has to consider river hydromorphology and inland navigation to efficiently rehabilitate the potamal region of large rives. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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