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Freshwater habitat invaders: Impacts on artificial flow refuge use by native fish under pulsed flows. | LitMetric

Freshwater habitat invaders: Impacts on artificial flow refuge use by native fish under pulsed flows.

Sci Total Environ

Civil Engineering Research and Innovation for Sustainability, Instituto Superior Técnico, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Freshwater biodiversity, especially native fish communities, is threatened by flow regulation and invasive species like the bleak (Alburnus alburnus), which is prevalent in the Iberian Peninsula.
  • This study investigates how the presence of bleak affects the habitat selection and stress responses of native Iberian barbel (Luciobarbus bocagei) under stable and fluctuating water flow conditions.
  • Results show that bleak presence significantly decreases barbel use of flow refuges and elevates stress markers (glucose and lactate), highlighting the bleak's competitive advantage in dynamic flow environments and the need for improved conservation strategies.

Article Abstract

Flow regulation and the spread of invasive species are significant threats to freshwater biodiversity, including native fish communities in rivers across the globe. The bleak (Alburnus alburnus), an invasive fish currently widespread throughout the main rivers of the Iberian Peninsula, threatens native fish biodiversity, mostly via trophic competition and hybridisation. In this study, we assessed the impacts of bleak presence and rapid flow fluctuations (both main and interactive effects) on the use of artificial habitats (a flow refuge) and the stress physiology of barbels. We examined how bleak's presence influenced the selection of flow refuges by the native Iberian barbel (Luciobarbus bocagei) under base (continuous 7 L s flow stimulus) and pulsed (7 L s to a 60 L s pulse) flows in an indoor flume. We quantified habitat use within three specific regions of two installed flow refuges and two physiological responses (glucose and lactate) associated with the stress axis. The results indicated that the presence of bleak significantly reduced flow refuge use by barbels and this effect was more prominent during pulsed flows. Additionally, barbels exhibited higher levels of glucose and lactate in the presence of bleaks. These results show that bleaks compete with barbels for habitat under fluctuating flows and induce physiological adjustments that may reduce the ability of barbels to find low-velocity areas to shelter. Overall, the bleaks had a competitive advantage under high flow variability. This underscores the need for further studies and effective management strategies to protect native freshwater fish communities in the context of biological invasions and anthropogenic flow variability.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.176924DOI Listing

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