Shields Robert, Pyron Mark, Arsenault Emily R, Thorp James H, Minder Mario, Artz Caleb, Costello John, Otgonganbat Amarbat, Mendsaikhan Bud, Altangerel Solongo, Maasri Alain
Aquatic Biology and Fisheries Ball State University Muncie Indiana USA.
Kansas Biological Survey and the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Kansas Lawrence Kansas USA.
Ecol Evol. 2021 Nov 26;11(23):16745-16762. doi: 10.1002/ece3.8300. eCollection 2021 Dec.
Stream fishes are restricted to specific environments with appropriate habitats for feeding and reproduction. Interactions between streams and surrounding landscapes influence the availability and type of fish habitat, nutrient concentrations, suspended solids, and substrate composition. Valley width and gradient are geomorphological variables that influence the frequency and intensity that a stream interacts with the surrounding landscape. For example, in constrained valleys, canyon walls are steeply sloped and valleys are narrow, limiting the movement of water into riparian zones. Wide valleys have long, flat floodplains that are inundated with high discharge. We tested for differences in fish assemblages with geomorphology variation among stream sites. We selected rivers in similar forested and endorheic ecoregion types of the United States and Mongolia. Sites where we collected were defined as geomorphologically unique river segments (i.e., functional process zones; FPZs) using an automated ArcGIS-based tool. This tool extracts geomorphic variables at the valley and catchment scales and uses them to cluster stream segments based on their similarity. We collected a representative fish sample from replicates of FPZs. Then, we used constrained ordinations to determine whether river geomorphology could predict fish assemblage variation. Our constrained ordination approach using geomorphology to predict fish assemblages resulted in significance using fish taxonomy and traits in several watersheds. The watersheds where constrained ordinations were not successful were next analyzed with unconstrained ordinations to examine patterns among fish taxonomy and traits with geomorphology variables. Common geomorphology variables as predictors for taxonomic fish assemblages were river gradient, valley width, and valley slope. Significant geomorphology predictors of functional traits were valley width-to-floor width ratio, elevation, gradient, and channel sinuosity. These results provide evidence that fish assemblages respond similarly and strongly to geomorphic variables on two continents.
溪流鱼类局限于具有适宜觅食和繁殖栖息地的特定环境。溪流与周边景观之间的相互作用会影响鱼类栖息地的可用性和类型、养分浓度、悬浮固体以及基质组成。山谷宽度和坡度是地貌变量,会影响溪流与周边景观相互作用的频率和强度。例如,在狭窄山谷中,峡谷壁坡度陡峭且山谷狭窄,限制了水流向河岸带的流动。宽阔山谷有长而平坦的泛滥平原,在高流量时会被淹没。我们测试了不同溪流站点地貌变化对鱼类群落的影响。我们在美国和蒙古类似的森林和内流生态区类型中选择了河流。我们收集样本的站点使用基于ArcGIS的自动化工具被定义为地貌独特的河段(即功能过程区;FPZ)。该工具提取山谷和集水区尺度的地貌变量,并利用它们根据相似性对溪段落进行聚类。我们从FPZ的重复样本中收集了具有代表性的鱼类样本。然后,我们使用受限排序来确定河流地貌是否能够预测鱼类群落的变化。我们使用地貌来预测鱼类群落的受限排序方法在几个流域中利用鱼类分类学和特征得出了显著结果。接下来,对受限排序未成功的流域使用非受限排序进行分析,以研究鱼类分类学和特征与地貌变量之间的模式。作为分类鱼类群落预测指标的常见地貌变量有河流坡度、山谷宽度和山谷坡度。功能特征的显著地貌预测指标有山谷宽度与谷底宽度之比、海拔、坡度和河道弯曲度。这些结果提供了证据,表明鱼类群落在两大洲对地貌变量的反应相似且强烈。