Impacts of land use and hydrological alterations on water quality and fish assemblage structure in headwater Pampean streams (Argentina)

2021 ◽  
Vol 84 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan Martín Paredes del Puerto ◽  
Ignacio Daniel García ◽  
Tomás Maiztegui ◽  
Ariel Hernán Paracampo ◽  
Leandro Rodrigues Capítulo ◽  
...  

<i>Abstract.</i>—The Brazilian savanna (Cerrado) is a biome of global importance with great endemism and environmental heterogeneity, but it is highly threatened and overexploited. Such a set of conditions is a key aspect of freshwater biodiversity and a challenge to our understanding of species-rich regions. Therefore, we investigated the fish diversity patterns and the effects of different land uses on fish assemblage structure in 155 Cerrado stream sites in four hydrological units. We assessed catchment land use and cover upstream of each sample site, where fish were sampled once during the dry season. Stream fish diversity patterns and the effects of different land uses on assemblage structure differed among the four hydrologic units, and in the region as a whole, but high values of beta diversity due to species turnover were consistently observed. We observed low explanation of land use in relation to fish assemblage structure, probably because of the high level of species turnover and large number of rare species. For some units, the most-correlated land uses were anthropogenic, and alien species were positively related to anthropogenic impacts. Our analysis highlights the importance of the heterogeneous composition of the fish fauna in Brazilian savanna streams and the significance of shifting towards protecting or properly managing whole basins and drainage networks.


<em>Abstract.</em>—We evaluated a comprehensive set of natural and land-use attributes that represent the major facets of urban development at fish monitoring sites in the rapidly growing Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina metropolitan area. We used principal component and correlation analysis to obtain a nonredundant subset of variables that extracted most variation in the complete set. With this subset of variables, we assessed the effect of urban growth on fish assemblage structure. We evaluated variation in fish assemblage structure with nonmetric multidimensional scaling (NMDS). We used correlation analysis to identify the most important environmental and landscape variables associated with significant NMDS axes. The second NMDS axis is related to many indices of land-use/landcover change and habitat. Significant correlations with proportion of largest forest patch to total patch size (<em>r </em>= –0.460, <EM>P </EM>< 0.01), diversity of patch types (<em>r </em>= 0.554, <EM>P </EM>< 0.001), and population density (<em>r </em>= 0.385, <EM>P </EM>< 0.05) helped identify NMDS axis 2 as a disturbance gradient. Positive and negative correlations between the abundance of redbreast sunfish <em>Lepomis auritus </em>and bluehead chub <em>Nocomis leptocephalus</em>, respectively, and NMDS axis 2 also were evident. The North Carolina index of biotic integrity and many of its component metrics were highly correlated with urbanization. These results indicate that aquatic ecosystem integrity would be optimized by a comprehensive integrated management strategy that includes the preservation of landscape function by maximizing the conservation of contiguous tracts of forested lands and vegetative cover in watersheds.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daros Felippe ◽  
Bueno Leonardo ◽  
Soeth Marcelo ◽  
Bertoncini Athila ◽  
Hostim-Silva Mauricio ◽  
...  

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