Mountain environments, as biodiversity hotspots, are subject to numerous anthropological pressures. In mountain areas, a common threat to stream biocenoses is the timber industry. Timber industry increases the fine sediment input into the mountain rivers; furthermore, timber transport requires the construction of low-water crossings across streams.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe expansion of beavers into human-dominated landscapes can help improve the ecological status of degraded streams. This study aimed to assess the changes in the ecological status of a degraded sandy-bottom stream under the influence of processes generated by the activity of a European beaver. We assumed that the processes in the beaver dam-and-pond complex significantly improved the physical, chemical, and bacteriological properties of water and improved the ecological status of a small lowland stream in a human-dominated landscape.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Carpathians are biodiversity hotspots in Europe. However, transformations resulting from human activity have affected stream catchments where forest management is carried out. Numerous anti-rubble weirs and other low-head barriers disrupt the continuity of many streams.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFine-grained sediments are a natural component of river systems. Human activities generate additional sources of fine sediment. In mountainous areas, the anthropogenic inputs of fine sediments are associated with forestry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBarrier effects observed in the presence of weirs are exacerbated by low water levels. We conducted a 10-year study to assess the ecological effects of stream restoration while analysing the possibility of a seasonal lack of hydrological continuity, with multiple measurements before and after restoring stream structural continuity. The research hypothesis assumes that in intermittent streams, there would be little or no change in the fish community downstream the barrier before vs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUrban expansion and the transformation of rural areas into suburban areas along with increasing human pressure can cause major changes in the environment. Typical effects of urbanization include degradation of aquatic ecosystems. However, urban expansion is often accompanied by an effort to provide residents with some contact with nature in the city.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Most common terrestrial animal clades exhibit senescence, suggesting strong adaptive value of this trait. However, there is little support for senescence correlated with specific adaptations. Nevertheless, insects, mammals, and birds, which are the most common terrestrial animal clades that show symptoms of senescence, evolved from clades that predominantly did not show symptoms of senescence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
December 2020
Elucidating the impact of faunal activity on stream channels is an emerging field wherein ecologists, fluvial geomorphologists, and engineers collaborate to research and manage fluvial ecosystems. Here, we focused on the geomorphological effects of animals in mountain streams. This ecosystem merits conservation measures as it furnishes cold-water refugia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe increase in anthropogenic sediment has become the most significant factor responsible for degrading flowing waters, preventing them from attaining the good ecological state of rivers requested by Water Framework Directive. After agriculture and mining, forest exploitation is a major source of mineral suspension. The accumulation of fine sediments may reduce fish spawning effectiveness, inhibit migration, and interfere with feeding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInvasive alien species are regarded a nuisance. This extends into a lack of conservation efforts in their native range. As a consequence, conservation of e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBlock ramps offer an opportunity to combine hydrotechnical structures with fish passages. The primary study objective was to evaluate the effectiveness of a block ramp for upstream fish movement in a mountain stream. Geodetic measurements of the bottom surface and water level were taken for three cross-sections.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExperimental gerontology is based on the fundamental assumption that the aging process has a universal character and that the mechanisms of aging are well-conserved among living things. The consequence of this assumption is the use of various organisms, including unicellular yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, as models in gerontology, and direct extrapolation of the conclusions drawn from the studies carried on these organisms to human beings. However, numerous arguments suggest that aging is not universal and its mechanisms are not conserved in a wide range of species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurveys of taxonomic groups of animals have shown that contrary to the opinion of most gerontologists aging is not a genuine trait. The process of aging is not universal and its mechanisms have not been widely conserved among species. All life forms are subject to extrinsic and intrinsic destructive forces.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAs a result of specific adaptations and habitat preferences strongly rheophilic fish species may show high levels of endemism. Many temperate rheophilic fish species were subjected to a series of range contractions during the Pleistocene, and then successfully expanded during the Holocene, colonising previously abandoned areas. The Carpathian barbel (Barbus carpathicus Kotlík, Tsigenopoulos, Ráb et Berrebi 2002) occurs in the montane streams in three basins of the main Central European rivers in the northern part of the Carpathian range.
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