Habitat use by a Midwestern U.S.A. riverine fish assemblage: effects of season, water temperature and river discharge

The hypothesis that temperate stream fishes alter habitat use in response to changing water temperature and stream discharge was evaluated over a 1 year period in the Neosho River, Kansas, U.S.A. at two spatial scales. Winter patterns differed from those of all other seasons, with shallower water us...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of fish biology 2006-05, Vol.68 (5), p.1494-1512
Hauptverfasser: Gillette, D. P., Tiemann, J. S., Edds, D. R., Wildhaber, M. L.
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container_end_page 1512
container_issue 5
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container_title Journal of fish biology
container_volume 68
creator Gillette, D. P.
Tiemann, J. S.
Edds, D. R.
Wildhaber, M. L.
description The hypothesis that temperate stream fishes alter habitat use in response to changing water temperature and stream discharge was evaluated over a 1 year period in the Neosho River, Kansas, U.S.A. at two spatial scales. Winter patterns differed from those of all other seasons, with shallower water used less frequently, and low‐flow habitat more frequently, than at other times. Non‐random habitat use was more frequent at the point scale (4·5 m2) than at the larger reach scale (20–40 m), although patterns at both scales were similar. Relative to available habitats, assemblages used shallower, swifter‐flowing water as temperature increased, and shallower, slower‐flowing water as river discharge increased. River discharge had a stronger effect on assemblage habitat use than water temperature. Proportion of juveniles in the assemblage did not have a significant effect. This study suggests that many riverine fishes shift habitats in response to changing environmental conditions, and supports, at the assemblage level, the paradigm of lotic fishes switching from shallower, high‐velocity habitats in summer to deeper, low‐velocity habitats in winter, and of using shallower, low‐velocity habitats during periods of high discharge. Results also indicate that different species within temperate river fish assemblages show similar habitat use patterns at multiple scales in response to environmental gradients, but that non‐random use of available habitats is more frequent at small scales.
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subjects Agnatha. Pisces
Animal and plant ecology
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Biological and medical sciences
dynamic landscape model
Fresh water ecosystems
Freshwater
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
river discharge
river fishes
Synecology
Vertebrates: general zoology, morphology, phylogeny, systematics, cytogenetics, geographical distribution
water depth
water flow
water temperature
title Habitat use by a Midwestern U.S.A. riverine fish assemblage: effects of season, water temperature and river discharge
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