Artigo
Temporal changes in fish diversity in lotic and lentic environments along a reservoir cascade
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Wiley
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Abstract
1. Long‐term modifications in hydrological conditions due to river damming result
in varied effects on fish diversity, which can be stronger in a reservoir cascade.
Therefore, we assessed changes in fish diversity over a 28‐year period, in a series
of reservoirs along the Araguari River Basin, a Neotropical drainage in Brazil, in
both lentic environments (reservoirs) and the lotic stretches between them.
2. We used linear mixed models to assess long‐term changes in fish diversity. Diversity
was measured as α diversity (fish species richness) and β diversity (Jaccard's and
Raup–Crick's dissimilarity index). Beta diversity was then partitioned into turno‐
ver (species replacement) and nestedness (species loss). To understand fish spe‐
cies replacement along the cascade, we modelled turnover with four covariates:
age, richness of native and non‐native fish species, and longitudinal position of
sampling site along the cascade.
3. The reduction of total richness and the increase in non‐native richness were re‐
lated to reservoir age. These effects were similar in both lotic and lentic environ‐
ments, with no significant difference between them. We also observed a decrease
in native fish richness over time, with a slight tendency for lentic environments to
lose more species than lotic environments.
4. Dissimilarity in fish assemblage increased over time and β Raup–Crick results
corroborated those derived from β Jaccard, yielding similar significant temporal
trends. Changes in fish species composition occurred predominantly due to turno‐
ver, compared to nestedness. We observed a greater species loss in reservoirs,
suggesting that the transformation from a lotic environment into a lentic had
greater impact on fish assemblages than the flow regulation of the lotic stretches
downstream of the dams. Our results suggest that species replacement can be
explained mainly by the increase of non‐native fish richness, followed by the lon‐
gitudinal position along the cascade in an upstream–downstream direction, and
reservoir age.
5. This study reveals that, even after 2 decades of monitoring, we still observe im‐
portant changes in fish assemblages, demonstrating the importance of long‐term
monitoring to assess biodiversity. Our findings reinforce the importance of long‐
term fish monitoring schemes for the investigation of the effects of non‐native
fish species on native fish assemblages.
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LOURES, R. C.; POMPEU, P. S. Temporal changes in fish diversity in lotic and lentic environments along a reservoir cascade. Freshwater Biology, [S.l.], v. 64, n. 10, p. 1806-1820, Oct. 2019.
