Taylor Andrew T, Tringali Michael D, Long James M
Department of Natural Resource Ecology and Management, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, Oklahoma, United States of America.
Department of Biology, University of North Georgia, Dahlonega, Georgia, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2025 Feb 5;20(2):e0315620. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0315620. eCollection 2025.
Impoundment construction has resulted in the alternation and loss of fluvial habitats, threatening the persistence of many native fishes. Compounding this threat, non-native species stocked into impoundments often invade interconnected fluvial habitats, where they may negatively affect native species. Black basses (genus Micropterus) are popular sportfishes with divergent ecologies: some taxa are tolerant of impoundments and widely stocked to create fishing opportunities, whereas others are endemic fluvial specialists that are threatened by introgression with non-native congeneric taxa. We investigated whether impoundments facilitate non-native invasion and introgression in two case study systems: Lake Lanier, Georgia, and Lake Tenkiller, Oklahoma. In both case studies, native fluvial taxa inhabited upstream tributaries and a non-native was established within the downstream impoundment. Results from longitudinal surveys of upstream tributaries provided clear evidence that non-natives invaded upstream from impoundments, and in some cases, extensive introgression with native taxa also occurred. Variation in spatial trends of invasion and directionalities of introgression across case studies provided insights into eco-evolutionary drivers. Within the riverscapes studied, proximity to impoundment appeared to influence invasion and introgression dynamics, and in one case, stream size was also influential. Introgression rates also varied markedly across the species pairs studied-from very little introgression to the onset of hybrid swarming-illustrating the importance of underlying eco-evolutionary mechanisms such as habitat alteration, propagule pressure, and reproductive isolation. Our results underscore the need to consider the upstream influences of impoundments, and the non-natives that invade from them, to create more holistic riverscape conservation plans for fluvial fishes, including native black basses.
蓄水工程建设导致了河流栖息地的改变和丧失,威胁到许多本地鱼类的生存。使这种威胁更加严重的是,放养到蓄水区域的非本地物种常常侵入与之相连的河流栖息地,在那里它们可能会对本地物种产生负面影响。黑鲈(小鳍鲈属)是具有不同生态习性的受欢迎的游钓鱼类:一些分类群能够耐受蓄水区域,并且被广泛放养以创造钓鱼机会,而其他一些则是河流特有的物种,受到与非本地同属分类群杂交渗入的威胁。我们在两个案例研究系统中调查了蓄水区域是否促进了非本地物种的入侵和杂交渗入,这两个系统分别是佐治亚州的拉尼尔湖和俄克拉荷马州的滕基勒湖。在这两个案例研究中,本地河流分类群栖息在上游支流,而一种非本地物种在下游蓄水区域定居。对上游支流的纵向调查结果提供了明确的证据,表明非本地物种从蓄水区域向上游入侵,并且在某些情况下,还发生了与本地分类群的广泛杂交渗入。跨案例研究的入侵空间趋势和杂交渗入方向的变化为生态进化驱动因素提供了见解。在所研究的河流景观中,与蓄水区域的距离似乎影响入侵和杂交渗入动态,并且在一个案例中,溪流大小也有影响。杂交渗入率在所研究的物种对中也有显著差异——从几乎没有杂交渗入到杂交群体开始形成——这说明了诸如栖息地改变、繁殖体压力和生殖隔离等潜在生态进化机制的重要性。我们的结果强调,需要考虑蓄水区域的上游影响以及从其中入侵的非本地物种,以便为河流鱼类,包括本地黑鲈,制定更全面的河流景观保护计划。