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- Title
Freshwater fish functional and taxonomic diversity above and below Niagara Falls.
- Authors
Lamothe, Karl A.; Hubbard, Justin A. G.; Drake, D. Andrew R.
- Abstract
The Niagara River, which connects two Great Lakes (Erie and Ontario) and forms a border between Canada and the United States, has experienced decades of abiotic and biotic disturbance as well as long-term restoration efforts. Given the iconic riverscape and importance as a binational fisheries resource, a biodiversity assessment of the mainstem Niagara River fish assemblage is overdue. Here, fish assemblage and habitat data from a standardized boat electrofishing program of the Niagara River were combined with species trait data related to substrate associations, diet preferences, reproductive strategies, and body size to quantify biodiversity patterns among river sections (sites above and below Niagara Falls), seasons (spring, summer, fall), and years (2015–2017). Sixty-five species were captured representing a variety of trait combinations. Significant differences in functional dispersion and divergence (i.e., functional diversity) were observed between river sections, seasons, and (or) years. The fish community captured in the lower river in spring 2015 had both the highest average functional dispersion (2.08 ± 0.32 SD) and divergence (0.88 ± 0.04 SD) compared to the other seasonal sampling efforts, but relatively few fishes were captured (n = 686). Although non-native fishes represented a small portion of the catch over the 3 years (8.6% of catch), the seasonal presence (spring and fall) of mostly introduced large-bodied salmonids expanded functional trait space in the lower river during these periods. The importance of rare species on functional diversity metrics suggests further insight on local species detection probabilities is needed to understand if differences in functional diversity reflect ecological patterns or are driven by sampling design.
- Subjects
NIAGARA Falls (Ont.); FRESHWATER fishes; ENDANGERED species; FISHERY resources; SEASONS; SPECIES diversity; FISH communities; FISH diversity
- Publication
Environmental Biology of Fishes, 2021, Vol 104, Issue 6, p637
- ISSN
0378-1909
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10641-020-01044-w