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Combined effects of physical environmental conditions and anthropogenic alterations are associated with macrophyte habitat fragmentation in rivers - Study of the Danube in Serbia. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how physical features and human-made changes to river environments affect the communities of aquatic plants (macrophytes) and contribute to habitat fragmentation in the Danube River.
  • Researchers analyzed 1,081 survey units across a 588 km stretch to categorize habitat fragments using Multivariate Regression Tree analysis alongside indicator species assessments.
  • They identified 30 different habitat fragments influenced mainly by damming, showing that these changes have led to high species diversity and significant alterations in the river's natural environment, emphasizing the need for future research to consider additional ecological factors.

Article Abstract

We hypothesize that the physical features of river habitats and anthropogenic hydromorphological alterations influence macrophyte communities and lead to habitat fragmentation. Sampling included 1081 contiguous survey units positioned in the main channel and side arms along 588km of the Danube River, along its middle course. To identify habitat fragments, Multivariate Regression Tree analysis (MRT) was applied on macrophyte and environmental data. Indicator species analyses were combined with MRT. To identify habitat fragments on a scale larger than final MRT groups, we set thresholds for an MRT complexity parameter. We identified 20 fine, 7 medium, and 3 large scale habitat fragments. Damming was the main fragmentation agent. Macrophyte communities show continuous variation at all scales of habitat fragmentation. High species diversity indicates major anthropogenic alteration of the river's hydrology and decline of the natural riparian zone. Future studies of the macrophyte communities, and their habitat fragmentation must include more factors (e.g. nutrient status, physicochemical quality of the water, etc.), as well as assessment of the importance of tributaries.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.03.367DOI Listing

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