Variability in the summer movements, habitat use and thermal biology of two fish species in a temperate river

The ability of fish to cope with warm water temperatures in summer depends on factors including their thermal traits and the ability of individuals to access cool-water refugia. Knowledge is highly limited on the in situ responses of many fishes to elevated summer temperatures, including whether the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Aquatic sciences 2024-07, Vol.86 (3), p.65-65, Article 65
Hauptverfasser: Amat-Trigo, Fatima, Tarkan, Ali Serhan, Andreou, Demetra, Aksu, Sadi, Bolland, Jonathan D., Gillingham, Phillipa K., Roberts, Catherine Gutmann, Yeldham, Mark I. A., Britton, J. Robert
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container_end_page 65
container_issue 3
container_start_page 65
container_title Aquatic sciences
container_volume 86
creator Amat-Trigo, Fatima
Tarkan, Ali Serhan
Andreou, Demetra
Aksu, Sadi
Bolland, Jonathan D.
Gillingham, Phillipa K.
Roberts, Catherine Gutmann
Yeldham, Mark I. A.
Britton, J. Robert
description The ability of fish to cope with warm water temperatures in summer depends on factors including their thermal traits and the ability of individuals to access cool-water refugia. Knowledge is highly limited on the in situ responses of many fishes to elevated summer temperatures, including whether they express behavioural thermoregulation. The responses of two riverine species to summer water temperatures were tested here using the movement metrics, spatial habitat use and body temperatures of individual European barbel Barbus barbus (‘barbel’) and common bream Abramis brama (‘bream’) versus river temperatures. Acoustic biotelemetry was applied in the lower River Severn basin, western Britain, in summer 2021 (barbel) and 2022 (bream), where individuals could move across > 150 km of river, including a tributary of cooler water. Across all individuals, bream occupied 37 km of river length (mainstem only), with low inter-individual variability in their spatial habitat use, movements and body temperatures. In contrast, barbel occupied 62 km of river (main river/tributary), with relatively high inter-individual variability in spatial habitat use, movements and body temperatures, with higher variation in body temperatures as river temperatures increased (maximum mean daily temperature difference between individuals on the same day: 4.2 °C). Although warmer individuals generally moved more, their activity was greatest at relatively low temperatures and higher flows, and neither species revealed any evidence of behavioural thermoregulation during elevated temperatures. Enabling phenotypically diverse fish populations to express their natural behaviours and thermal preferences in summer water temperatures thus requires maintaining their free-ranging in thermally heterogenous habitats.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s00027-024-01073-y
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identifier ISSN: 1015-1621
ispartof Aquatic sciences, 2024-07, Vol.86 (3), p.65-65, Article 65
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subjects Abramis brama
acoustics
Animal population
Barbus barbus
basins
Biology
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Biotelemetry
Body temperature
Bream
Ecology
Environmental Management
Fish
Fish populations
Freshwater & Marine Ecology
habitat preferences
Habitat selection
Habitat utilization
Habitats
High temperature
Life Sciences
Low temperature
Marine & Freshwater Sciences
Oceanography
refuge habitats
Refuges
Refugia
Research Article
riparian areas
Rivers
species
Summer
temperature
Temperature differences
Temperature gradients
Thermoregulation
Tributaries
United Kingdom
Variability
Warm water
Water
Water temperature
title Variability in the summer movements, habitat use and thermal biology of two fish species in a temperate river
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