| Literature DB >> 25572836 |
Cleber J R Alho1, Roberto E Reis, Pedro P U Aquino.
Abstract
Matching the trend seen among the major large rivers of the globe, the Amazon River and its tributaries are facing aquatic ecosystem disruption that is affecting freshwater habitats and their associated biodiversity, including trends for decline in fishery resources. The Amazon's aquatic ecosystems, linked natural resources, and human communities that depend on them are increasingly at risk from a number of identified threats, including expansion of agriculture; cattle pastures; infrastructure such as hydroelectric dams, logging, mining; and overfishing. The forest, which regulates the hydrological pulse, guaranteeing the distribution of rainfall and stabilizing seasonal flooding, has been affected by deforestation. Flooding dynamics of the Amazon Rivers are a major factor in regulating the intensity and timing of aquatic organisms. This study's objective was to identify threats to the integrity of freshwater ecosystems, and to seek instruments for conservation and sustainable use, taking principally fish diversity and fisheries as factors for analysis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25572836 PMCID: PMC4510326 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-014-0610-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Fig. 1Study regions (upper Xingu River, Lower Tocantins River, and mid Negro River) Amazonian threatened areas, rich in aquatic biodiversity focus of the fieldwork
Study sites in the Upper Xingu River region informing geographic position and altitude of each site
| Study sites | Latitude | Longitude | Altitude (m) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Headwater of the | −12.880338° | −52.814270° | 300 |
| Jointure of | −12.924960° | −52.825969° | 302 |
| Upper | −13.077444° | −52.885847° | 310 |
| Coronel | −13.126701° | −52.689272° | 304 |
| Upper Coronel | −13.237053° | −52.629633° | 317 |
| Upper | −13.239636° | −52.551104° | 311 |
| Upper | −14.045409° | −52.344515° | 355 |
Study sites in the Lower Tocantins River region informing geographic position and altitude of each site
| Study sites | Latitude | Longitude | Altitude (m) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| −2.792377° | −49.674500° | 10 |
|
| −3.016875° | −49.748470° | 12 |
|
| −3.031125° | −49.646270° | 13 |
|
| −3.450295° | −49.608875° | 13 |
|
| −3.558638° | −49.612157° | 14 |
|
| −3.756088° | −49.664309° | 16 |
|
| −3.832021° | −49.643278° | 70 |
|
| −3.848169° | −49.680821° | 70 |
|
| −4.414191° | −49.387704° | 73 |
|
| −4.522811° | −49.408602° | 73 |
Study sites in the Mid Negro River region informing geographic position and altitude of each site
| Study sites | Latitude | Longitude | Altitude (m) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fishing area 1 | −0.856116° | −62.765446° | 35 |
|
| −0.966978° | −62.928499° | 30 |
|
| −0.483100° | −62.921512° | 29 |
|
| −0.506514° | −63.214250° | 27 |
|
| −0.770953° | −63.142164° | 25 |
|
| −0.771188° | −62.937692° | 28 |
|
| −0.924075° | −62.917655° | 29 |
|
| −0.808618° | −63.237575° | 27 |
|
| −0.467140° | −62.928506° | 39 |
| Fishing area 2 ( | −0.629722° | −62.868497° | 33 |
| Fishing area 3 | −0.464315° | −63.154313° | 28 |
| Fishing area 4 | −0.466774° | −62.936246° | 40 |
|
| −0.414927° | −62.903415° | 44 |
| Fishing area 5 | −0.833065° | −63.231232° | 35 |
| Fishing area 6 ( | −0.865862° | −62.774625° | 32 |
Identification and description of environmental and socioeconomic threats in the three Amazonian river basins sampled during the fieldwork: Upper Xingu River, Lower Tocantins River, and Mid Negro
| Threat | Description of threat | Upper | Lower | Mid |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alteration and loss of fish habitats due to deforestation of riparian vegetation | Habitat conversion of riparian communities, from expansion of agriculture, cattle ranching and urbanization in floodplains | Intensively verified | Moderately verified | Not yet relevant |
| Effect of reduced river flow due to deforestation of headwater areas | Changes in upland areas (deforestation, expanding cattle ranching, urbanization) resulting indirectly in greater sediment loads and contaminants such as fertilizers and pesticide from run-off | Observed conversion of natural vegetation into huge areas of soybean crop fields | Moderately verified | Not yet relevant |
| Effect of environmental contaminants on the water quality | Direct contamination of rivers from increased dumping of organic and solid waste into rivers from expanding urban areas and from activities such as intensive agriculture and mining | Potential contamination of waters from agricultural fertilizers and pesticides | Urban sewage pollutants | Urban sewage pollutants |
| Effect of hydroelectric reservoirs on diversity and fish communities | Transformation of a lotic environment into a lake eradicating or reducing populations of rheophilic fish species, and providing favorable conditions for lentic species to proliferate | Moderate and specifically located effect from small hydroelectric plants |
| Not relevant |
| Effect of infrastructure on diversity and fish communities | Changes in hydrological regimes through construction of infrastructure such as roads, ports and navigation channels | Moderate impact | Severe impact | Not relevant |
| Threats to turtles and freshwater mammals | Illegal hunting and commerce of wildlife | Moderate impact in the upper region but very severe in the lower portion ( | Severe impact | Moderate impact |
| Effects of fishing conflicts | Detected growing number of conflicts among natural resource users | Moderate conflict between sport and subsistence fishing | Severe conflict among commercial fishing interests | Moderate conflict between ornamental and sport fishing |
| Decline of ornamental aquarium fishing | Capture of ornamental fish species for aquarium international commerce | Not relevant in the upper region but important in the lower area of Volta Grande do | Not relevant here | Negative socioeconomic effect due to decline in demand; fishermen are now starting to seek their livelihoods in other activities, such as agriculture |
| Effects of deficient implementation of fishing regulation | Lack of organizational and institutional capacity to deal with fishing in a participatory and integrated manner | Sport fishing observed here to be organized to take advantage of immediate income of fishing opportunity | Several fishing colonies exist but conflicts are still severe due to the lack of fishing regulation and implementation | Weakness of organization due to present decline in ornamental fishing |
| Effects of deficient dialogue between participant actors of fishing social organizations | Social organizations play a significant role in enabling fishery management to ensure sustainability | Strong organization among owners of sport fishing accommodation but low concern for sustainability | Conflicts among subsistence, commercial and sport fishing | Drastic decline in dialogue due to decline in demand for ornamental fishing |
| Effects of overfishing | Overexploitation of fishery resources is observed when fish stocks are suppressed to a level where fishing in a given region is no longer sustainable, that is, there is a need to increase fishing effort and stocks are not replenished naturally | Competition between sport fishing and artisanal subsistence fishing. Smaller fish sizes. | Observed strong pressure on fishing stocks to meet demand | Sport fishing in increasing demand and ornamental fishing in decline |
| Effects of global climate change on aquatic environments | The published literature indicates that it appears highly possible that the predicted climate change over the next decades may well cause additional damage to Amazon aquatic ecosystems | Regionally subject to drying change due to intense and extended deforestation | Regionally subject to change due to drastic environmental change— | Forest still well preserved |