Stream Fish Community Dynamics

Stream Fish Community Dynamics
Author: William J. Matthews
Publisher: JHU Press
Total Pages: 359
Release: 2017-05
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 1421422026

The most comprehensive synthesis of stream fish community research ever produced. Winner of the CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title of the Choice ACRL Ecologists have long struggled to understand community dynamics. In this groundbreaking book, leading fish ecologists William Matthews and Edie Marsh-Matthews apply long-term studies of stream fish communities to several enduring questions. This critical synthesis reaches to the heart of ecological theory, testing concepts against the four decades of data the authors have collected from numerous warm-water stream fish communities in the central and eastern United States. Stream Fish Community Dynamics draws together the work of a single research team to provide fresh analyses of the short- and long-term dynamics of numerous streams, each with multiple sampling sites. Conducting repeated surveys of fish communities at temporal scales from months to decades, the authors' research findings will fascinate anyone searching for a deeper understanding of community ecology. The study sites covered by this book range from small headwater creeks to large prairie rivers in Oklahoma and from Ozark and Ouachita mountain streams in Arkansas to the upland Roanoke River in Virginia. The book includes • A comparison of all global and local communities with respect to community composition at the species and family level, emergent community properties, and the relationship between those emergent properties and the environments of the study sites • Analyses of traits of individual species that are important to their distribution or success in harsh environments • A review of evidence for the importance of interactions—including competition and predation—in community dynamics of stream fishes • An assessment of disturbance effects in fish community dynamics • New analysis of the short- and long-term dynamics of variation in stream fish communities, illustrating the applicability and importance of the "loose equilibrium concept" • New analyses and comparisons of spatiotemporal variation in community dynamics and beta diversity partitioning • An overview of the effects of fish in ecosystems in the central and eastern United States The book ends with a summary chapter that places the authors' findings in broader contexts and describes how the "loose equilibrium concept"—which may be the most appropriate default assumption for dynamics of stream fishes in the changing climate of the future—applies to many kinds of stream fish communities.

Effects of Extreme Flow Events on Community Composition and Habitat Complexity of Groundwater Dominated Systems

Effects of Extreme Flow Events on Community Composition and Habitat Complexity of Groundwater Dominated Systems
Author: Joshua D. Tivin
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2023
Genre: Fishes
ISBN:

Extreme flow events in the form of major floods and droughts are primary drivers in structuring aquatic habitats and communities. While floods and droughts can directly alter aquatic biota by displacement or by increased mortalities, extreme flow events can have an indirect and prolonged effect on biota by altering habitat complexity, which in turn delays the recovery of the aquatic biota. Interrelationships among extreme flow events, habitat complexity, and fish communities are established in hydrologically variable rivers (run-off dominated). Less known are the interrelationships among stream flow extremes, habitat complexity, and fish communities in hydrologically stable rivers (groundwater dominated). The purpose of this study was to assess how extreme flow events effect habitat complexity and the fish community within two hydrologically stable rivers in Texas (San Marcos and Comal rivers) using a 9-year dataset. Habitats (N = 4,863) within 12 reaches of the rivers were categorized as high, moderate, or low complexity along a depth, vegetation, substrate, and current velocity gradient. Following or during extreme flow events, shifts in habitat complexity were not evident except in low complexity habitats that shifted towards greater complexity during drought. Among a total of 43 fish species and 135,199 individuals observed, densities of surface water fishes (Gambusia), pelagic generalist fishes (Lepomis, Micropterus, Herichthys), pelagic fluvial fishes (Dionda, Notropis, and Astyanax), and benthic fishes (Etheostoma) generally were greater in high and moderate habitat complexity reaches than in lower habitat complexity reaches and generally unaffected by extreme flow events with few exceptions. These results indicated that habitat complexity in hydrologically stable rivers support greater densities and diversity of fishes similar to hydrologically variable rivers, but habitat complexity and fish community were more resistant and resilient to extreme flow events in hydrologically stable rivers than in hydrologically variable rivers.

Commencement Ceremony

Commencement Ceremony
Author: University of California, Davis. Graduate Division
Publisher:
Total Pages: 82
Release: 1990
Genre: Commencement ceremonies
ISBN:

Models that Predict Standing Crop of Stream Fish from Habitat Variables

Models that Predict Standing Crop of Stream Fish from Habitat Variables
Author: Kurt D. Fausch
Publisher:
Total Pages: 60
Release: 1988
Genre: Fish communities
ISBN:

We reviewed mathematical models that predict standing crop of stream fish (number or biomass per unit area or length of stream) from measurable habitat variables and classified them by the types of independent habitat variables found significant, by mathematical structure, and by model quality. Habitat variables were of three types and were measured on different scales in relation to stream channels: variables of drainage basins were measured on the coarsest scale from topographic maps; channel-morphometry and flow variables were measured in the field along transects perpendicular to flow; and habitat-structure, biological, physical, and chemical variables were measured on the finest scale in the field. We grouped the 99 reviewed models by the types of independent variables found significant during model development: (A) primarily drainage basin (5 models), (8) primarily channel morphometry and flow (16 models), (C) primarily habitat structure, biological, physical, and chemical (25 models), (D) a combination of several types of variables (39 models), and (E) tests of weighted usable area as a habitat model (14 models. Most models were linear or multiple linear regressions, or correlations, but a few were curvilinear functions (exponential or power). Some used multivariate techniques (principal components or factor analysis), and some combined independent variables into one or more indices. We judged model quality based on simple criteria of precision and generality: coefficient of determination, sample size, and degrees of freedom. Most models were based on data sets of fewer than 20 observations and, thus, also had fewer than 20 degrees of freedom. Most models with coefficients of determination of greater than 0.75 had fewer than 20 degrees of freedom, which led us to conclude that relatively precise models often lacked generality. We found that sound statistical procedures were often overlooked or were minimized during development of many models. Frequent problems were too small a sample size, possible bias caused by error in measuring habitat variables, using poor methods for choosing the best model, not testing models, using models based on observational data to predict standing crop, and making unrealistic assumptions about capture probabilities when estimating standing crop. The major biological assumptionthat the fish population was limited by habitat rather than fishing mortality, interspecific competition, or predationusually was not addressed. We found five main ways stream-fish-habitat models are used in fishery management. To be useful for analyzing land management alternatives, models must include variables affected by management and be specific for a homogeneous area of land.