Marine Ecology Research Group, School of Biological Sciences, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand.
Freshwater Ecology Research Group, School of Biological Sciences, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand.
PLoS One. 2023 Mar 14;18(3):e0261993. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0261993. eCollection 2023.
With the global decline of freshwater fishes, quantifying the body size-specific habitat use of vulnerable species is crucial for accurately evaluating population health, identifying the effects of anthropogenic stressors, and directing effective habitat restoration. Populations of New Zealand's endemic kōkopu species (Galaxias fasciatus, G. argenteus, and G. postvectis) have declined substantially over the last century in response to anthropogenic stressors, including habitat loss, migratory barriers, and invasive species. Despite well-understood habitat associations, key within-habitat features underpinning the reach-scale biomass of small and large kōkopu remain unclear. Here, we investigated whether the total biomass of large (> 90 mm) size classes of each kōkopu species and the composite biomass of all small (≤ 90 mm) kōkopu were associated with components of the physical environment that provided refuge and prey resources across fifty-seven 50-m stream reaches. Because kōkopu are nocturnal, populations were sampled by removal at night using headlamps and hand-nets until reaches were visually depleted. Based on Akaike's information criterion, greater large banded kōkopu biomass was most parsimoniously explained by greater pool volume and forest cover, greater large giant kōkopu biomass by greater bank cover and pool volume, and greater large shortjaw kōkopu biomass by greater substrate size and pool volume. In contrast, greater composite small kōkopu biomass was best explained by smaller substrate size, reduced bank cover, and greater pool volume. Local habitat associations therefore varied among kōkopu species and size classes. Our study demonstrates the importance of considering the ontogenetic shift in species' habitat use and provides an effective modelling approach for quantifying size-specific local habitat use of stream-dwelling fish.
随着全球淡水鱼类数量的减少,量化易危物种的体型特定栖息地利用对于准确评估种群健康、识别人为胁迫的影响以及指导有效的栖息地恢复至关重要。在过去的一个世纪里,新西兰特有物种 kōkopu(Galaxias fasciatus、G. argenteus 和 G. postvectis)的种群数量大幅下降,这是对人为胁迫的反应,包括栖息地丧失、洄游障碍和入侵物种。尽管对栖息地的关联有很好的了解,但支持小和大 kōkopu 到达尺度生物量的关键生境内特征仍不清楚。在这里,我们研究了每个 kōkopu 物种的大 (>90 毫米) 体型类别的总生物量和所有小 (<90 毫米) kōkopu 的复合生物量是否与提供庇护和猎物资源的物理环境组成部分有关,这些环境跨越了 57 个 50 米的溪流河段。由于 kōkopu 是夜间活动的,因此通过夜间使用头灯和手网进行去除来对种群进行采样,直到到达视觉上耗尽。基于赤池信息量准则,较大的带纹大 kōkopu 生物量最简洁地解释为更大的池体积和森林覆盖,较大的巨 kōkopu 生物量由更大的河岸覆盖和池体积解释,较大的短颚 kōkopu 生物量由更大的基质大小和池体积解释。相比之下,更大的复合小 kōkopu 生物量则由较小的基质大小、减少的河岸覆盖和更大的池体积来解释。因此,不同 kōkopu 物种和体型类别的局部栖息地关联各不相同。我们的研究表明了考虑物种栖息地利用的个体发育转变的重要性,并为量化溪流鱼类的体型特定局部栖息地利用提供了一种有效的建模方法。