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Fish assemblages on two continents respond to valley‐ and reach‐scale hydrogeomorphic variation: Analyses across three temperate ecoregions.

Authors :
Pyron, Mark
Maasri, Alain
Costello, John
Kenner, Scott
Otgonganbat, Amarbat
Mendsaikhan, Bud
Chandra, Sudeep
Thorp, James H.
Arsenault, Emily R.
Shields, Robert
Artz, Caleb
Minder, Mario
Source :
Ecology of Freshwater Fish. Jun2024, p1. 12p. 7 Illustrations, 2 Charts.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Fish assemblages, defined by taxonomy or functional traits, –respond to regional and local habitat variation. Our hypothesis was that fish assemblages could be best predicted using reach‐scale (RS) hydrology variables over valley‐scale (VS) hydrogeomorphology variables for US and Mongolian rivers. We further predicted that fish traits were predicted better by RS than VS variables. We evaluated the FS and VS hydrogeomorphologies of rivers in the United States and Mongolia in each of three ecoregions: grassland, forest and endorheic. Fishes were collected using a backpack electrofisher, following standard protocols. Constrained ordination analyses were conducted at three scales: among continents, by continents and by individual ecoregions within continents. We found no significant difference in mean variation explained by VS versus RS or by taxonomy versus traits. Ecoregions differed in factors contributing to fish assemblage patterns, likely a result of differences in hydrogeomorphology, hydrological connectivity and historical influences. We found that fish assemblages were structured by hydrogeomorphic processes occurring at VS and RS, and that variables predicting fish assemblages varied with scale and whether fishes were classified by taxonomy or traits. Although anthropogenic impacts were substantially higher for western US rivers than for Mongolian rivers, we were unable to detect strong differences in our ability to predict fish assemblage variation from RS and VS habitat variables. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09066691
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Ecology of Freshwater Fish
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177989126
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/eff.12806