scholarly journals How River Capture Affects the Evolution of Aquatic Organisms

Eos ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 101 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Shultz

River basins are dynamic environments that are always changing and reorganizing under geologic forces. New research investigates how this shape shifting influences aquatic speciation and extinction.

Author(s):  
André Augusto Rodrigues Salgado ◽  
Luís Felipe Soares Cherem ◽  
Michael Vinícius De Sordi

Capturas fluviais foram pouco investigadas no Brasil e apenas recentemente essa situação se alterou e sua ocorrência e feições correlatas foram sistematicamente estudadas para as grandes bacias fluviais não Amazônicas. Esse artigo sintetiza os principais resultados obtidos nos últimos cinco anos e apresenta a diversidade de magnitude e morfológica em seis capturas fluviais ao longo de quatro divisores entre as principais bacias hidrográficas do Brasil. Os resultados indicam que o nível de base, seguido da litoestrutura e da tectônica, constituem os fatores determinantes para ocorrência desses processos. Indicam ainda que as bacias hidrográficas atlânticas estão pirateando áreas das ditas continentais – Paraná e São Francisco – e que essa pirataria acelera o recuo erosivo do escarpamento da margem passiva sul-americana. Por fim, determinaram que as capturas causam a dissecação da rede de drenagem capturada, invertem o fluxo dos canais logo a jusante e, por fim, promovem o rebaixamento geral do relevo pirateado. Large fluvial captures in Brazil: synthesis of new discoveriesRiver captures have barely been studied in Brazil, and only recently the process and correlated features have been systematically studied for non-Amazonian major river basins. This paper synthesizes the main results obtained for the last five years and presents the diversity in magnitude and morphology of six river captures along the four divider of Brazilian-major river basins. The results indicate that the base level, followed by the lithostructure and tectonics, are the determining factors for the occurrence of these processes. They also indicate that the Atlantic basins are pirating areas of the continental ones - Paraná and São Francisco - and that this piracy accelerates the erosive retreat of the South American passive margin escarpment. Finally, they determined that the captures cause the dissection of the drainage network, invert the flow of the channels shortly downstream, and finally, promote the general lowering of the pirated relief. Keywords: River capture, Brazil, Major Basin Dividers, Fluvial Channel.  


1995 ◽  
Vol 32 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 283-291 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. M. Chutter

The paper considers the several beneficial (provision of drinking water, fish, waste assimilation) and detrimental (overabundant plant life, habitat for pathogens and disease vectors) roles of the aquatic biota in general, before describing the use of the biota in river management through biomonitoring. This is followed by a description of a biomonitoring method called SASS which is based on the aquatic macro-invertebrate community. Results of using SASS4 are presented and show that SASS4 scores vary following water quality. SASS4 results are less expensive than the chemical analysis of water samples and represent water quality variation over a period of time. SASS4 has a role to play in the monitoring and assessment of water quality. It can be used as a substitute for chemical analysis in broad scale monitoring and allow chemical resources to be focused on sampling points where there would appear to be real water quality problems. Since river quality (both chemical and biological) reflects the manner in which the basin is managed, SASS4 provides key information pertinent to the management of river basins. It is concluded that river assessment based on the aquatic biota has an essential role to play in the management of river basins for sustainable utilization.


2004 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 846-857 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. J. Wade ◽  
C. Neal ◽  
D. Butterfield ◽  
M. N. Futter

Abstract. This contribution closes this special issue of Hydrology and Earth System Sciences concerning the assessment of nitrogen dynamics in catchments across Europe within a semi-distributed Integrated Nitrogen model for multiple source assessment in Catchments (INCA). New developments in the understanding of the factors and processes determining the concentrations and loads of nitrogen are outlined. The ability of the INCA model to simulate the hydrological and nitrogen dynamics of different European ecosystems is assessed and the results of the first scenario analyses investigating the impacts of deposition, climatic and land-use change on the nitrogen dynamics are summarised. Consideration is given as to how well the model has performed as a generic tool for describing the nitrogen dynamics of European ecosystems across Arctic, Maritime, Continental and Mediterranean climates, its role in new research initiatives and future research requirements. Keywords: nitrogen, nitrate, ammonium, phosphorus, catchments, streams, rivers, river basins


2022 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pedro Val ◽  
Nathan J. Lyons ◽  
Nicole Gasparini ◽  
Jane K. Willenbring ◽  
James S. Albert

The exceptional concentration of vertebrate diversity in continental freshwaters has been termed the “freshwater fish paradox,” with > 15,000 fish species representing more than 20% of all vertebrate species compressed into tiny fractions of the Earth’s land surface area (<0.5%) or total aquatic habitat volume (<0.001%). This study asks if the fish species richness of the world’s river basins is explainable in terms of river captures using topographic metrics as proxies. The River Capture Hypothesis posits that drainage-network rearrangements have accelerated biotic diversification through their combined effects on dispersal, speciation, and extinction. Yet rates of river capture are poorly constrained at the basin scale worldwide. Here we assess correlations between fish species density (data for 14,953 obligate freshwater fish species) and basin-wide metrics of landscape evolution (data for 3,119 river basins), including: topography (elevation, average relief, slope, drainage area) and climate (average rainfall and air temperature). We assess the results in the context of both static landscapes (e.g., species-area and habitat heterogeneity relationships) and transient landscapes (e.g., river capture, tectonic activity, landscape disequilibrium). We also relax assumptions of functional neutrality of basins (tropical vs. extratropical, tectonically stable vs. active terrains). We found a disproportionate number of freshwater species in large, lowland river basins of tropical South America, Africa, and Southeast Asia, under predictable conditions of large geographic area, tropical climate, low topographic relief, and high habitat volume (i.e., high rainfall rates). However, our results show that these conditions are only necessary, but not fully sufficient, to explain the basins with the highest diversity. Basins with highest diversity are all located on tectonically stable regions, places where river capture is predicted to be most conducive to the formation of high fish species richness over evolutionary timescales. Our results are consistent with predictions of several landscape evolution models, including the River Capture Hypothesis, Mega Capture Hypothesis, and Intermediate Capture Rate Hypothesis, and support conclusions of numerical modeling studies indicating landscape transience as a mechanistic driver of net diversification in riverine and riparian organisms with widespread continental distributions.


2019 ◽  
Vol 42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michele Ilana Friedner

Abstract This commentary focuses on three points: the need to consider semiotic ideologies of both researchers and autistic people, questions of commensurability, and problems with “the social” as an analytical concept. It ends with a call for new research methodologies that are not deficit-based and that consider a broad range of linguistic and non-linguistic communicative practices.


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