Details zur Publikation

Kategorie Textpublikation
Referenztyp Zeitschriften
DOI 10.1002/eco.1379
Volltext Shareable Link
Titel (primär) Spatio-temporal habitat selection shifts in brown trout populations under contrasting natural flow regimes
Autor Ayllón, D.; Nicola, G.G.; Parra, I.; Elvira, B.; Almodóvar, A.
Quelle Ecohydrology
Erscheinungsjahr 2014
Department OESA
Band/Volume 7
Heft 2
Seite von 569
Seite bis 579
Sprache englisch
Keywords natural flow regime; disturbance events; ecohydrology; flow alteration; river conservation and management; salmonids; freshwater fish; resource selection functions
UFZ Querschnittsthemen RU5;
Abstract Understanding the links between instream ecology and hydrology has become a critical task in contemporary river research and management. Habitat selection behaviour is a central dimension in applied ecology because it is a primary way that mobile organisms adapt to changing environmental conditions. Here, we analyzed brown trout habitat selection during two consecutive years in rivers presenting contrasting flow conditions to test the following hypotheses: (1) given that adaptation to flow regimes occurs as a response to the interaction between frequency, magnitude and predictability of mortality-causing events, habitat selection would vary across populations subject to different disturbance regimes; (2) because adaptations are directed towards enduring both intra-annual and interannual variations in flow, habitat selection would shift across years as a response to changing flow conditions and (3) such responses to yearly flow fluctuations would depend on the historical long-term hydrologic regime. We found that trout from rivers with highly variable flow and more frequent, longer and stronger extreme flow events were more willing to occupy positions in high-velocity habitats and showed stronger requirements for velocity refuges, whereas trout inhabiting more stable and benign flow environments selected visually-covered habitats to minimize biotic interactions. Results also revealed that trout shifted habitat selection patterns across years differing in flow conditions irrespective of river typology, but this shift was markedly stronger in rivers with higher flow variability and extremity. Overall, observed ecological patterns have strong implications for predicting the consequences of flow alteration for species adapted to particular flow regimes.
dauerhafte UFZ-Verlinkung https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=14826
Ayllón, D., Nicola, G.G., Parra, I., Elvira, B., Almodóvar, A. (2014):
Spatio-temporal habitat selection shifts in brown trout populations under contrasting natural flow regimes
Ecohydrology 7 (2), 569 - 579 10.1002/eco.1379