Literature DB >> 28218807

Characterizing fish responses to a river restoration over 21 years based on species' traits.

Stefanie Höckendorff1, Jonathan D Tonkin1,2, Peter Haase1,3, Margret Bunzel-Drüke4, Olaf Zimball4, Matthias Scharf4, Stefan Stoll1,5.   

Abstract

Understanding restoration effectiveness is often impaired by a lack of high-quality, long-term monitoring data and, to date, few researchers have used species' trait information to gain insight into the processes that drive the reaction of fish communities to restoration. We examined fish-community responses with a highly resolved data set from 21 consecutive years of electrofishing (4 years prerestoration and 17 years postrestoration) at multiple restored and unrestored reaches from a river restoration project on the Lippe River, Germany. Fish abundance peaked in the third year after the restoration; abundance was 6 times higher than before the restoration. After 5-7 years, species richness and abundance stabilized at 2 and 3.5 times higher levels relative to the prerestoration level, respectively. However, interannual variability of species richness and abundance remained considerable, illustrating the challenge of reliably assessing restoration outcomes based on data from individual samplings, especially in the first years following restoration. Life-history and reproduction-related traits best explained differences in species' responses to restoration. Opportunistic short-lived species with early female maturity and multiple spawning runs per year exhibited the strongest increase in abundance, which reflected their ability to rapidly colonize new habitats. These often small-bodied and fusiform fishes typically live in dynamic and ephemeral instream and floodplain areas that river-habitat restorations often aim to create, and in this case their increases in abundance indicated successful restoration. Our results suggest that a greater consideration of species' traits may enhance the causal understanding of community processes and the coupling of restoration to functional ecology. Trait-based assessments of restoration outcomes would furthermore allow for easier transfer of knowledge across biogeographic borders than studies based on taxonomy.
© 2017 Society for Conservation Biology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  análisis bioenv; bioenv analysis; long-term monitoring; monitoreo de larga duración; overshooting response; regional species pool; reservorio regional de especies; respuesta excedente; restauración de arroyos; stream restoration

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28218807     DOI: 10.1111/cobi.12908

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Conserv Biol        ISSN: 0888-8892            Impact factor:   6.560


  1 in total

1.  Extended Water-Level Drawdowns in Dammed Rivers Enhance Fish Habitat: Environmental Pool Management in the Upper Mississippi River.

Authors:  A A Coulter; S R Adams; M B Flinn; M R Whiles; B M Burr; R J Sheehan; J E Garvey
Journal:  Environ Manage       Date:  2018-11-14       Impact factor: 3.266

  1 in total

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