FishPass Sortable Attribute Database: Phenological, morphological, physiological, and behavioural characteristics related to passage and movement of Great Lakes fishes
In-stream barriers pose threats to fishes, including habitat loss, constraints on migration, and reduced connectivity between populations. Despite many negative consequences, barriers can serve to protect native species by limiting the spread of invasive species. For example, in the Laurentian Great...
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Zusammenfassung: | In-stream barriers pose threats to fishes, including habitat loss,
constraints on migration, and reduced connectivity between populations.
Despite many negative consequences, barriers can serve to protect native
species by limiting the spread of invasive species. For example, in the
Laurentian Great Lakes, physical barriers have long been used to control
invasive Sea Lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) populations by limiting access
to potential upstream spawning and rearing habitat. Selective fish passage
systems could solve this connectivity conundrum but must efficiently pass
multiple native or desirable species while blocking invasive species.
Designing such fish passage systems requires an understanding of the
phenology, morphology, physiology, and behaviour (attribute dimensions) of
fishes in the community. Here, we describe the first comprehensive
collection of sortable attributes associated with fish passage. The
integrated database consists of 21 biological attributes that influence
the movement and passage of 220 species in the Great Lakes. Data coverage
varies with species, taxonomic orders, and attribute dimensions.
Behavioural attributes were typically underrepresented in the literature
and the ecology of potential invaders was not well understood. The
synthesis described herein is a critical step towards a holistic approach
to fish passage design and may help to inform management actions related
to population connectivity. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.fqz612jwj |