1. Longitudinal Variation in the Ohio River Fish Community
- Author
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Elgin S. Perry, Doug Dixon, Greg Seegert, and Joe Vondruska
- Subjects
Ecology ,Generalized additive model ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Aquatic Science ,Fishery ,Index of biological integrity ,Taxon ,Geography ,Electrofishing ,Abundance (ecology) ,%22">Fish ,Species richness ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The Ohio River fish community was sampled three times (June, August, and October) in 2005 by electrofishing near 17 power plants encompassing nearly the entire length of the Ohio River (river kilometer 82–1,527). Six 500-m zones were electrofished at each plant. Using a generalized additive model, we examined this data set of 306 electrofishing samples to determine how the abundance of 31 taxa varied over the length of the river. We also looked for trends in several measures of community health (catch rate, species richness, index of biotic integrity, and modified index of well-being). Of the 31 taxa examined, all but three showed longitudinal differences over the course of the river. Based on the patterns for the 31 taxa and 5 community measures, we assigned each taxon or measure to one of seven classes. The largest class included 10 taxa that declined steadily in abundance from upriver to downriver. All community measures followed a similar pattern except that each measure increased near the do...
- Published
- 2013
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