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The dramatic depletion of diversity and standing crop of freshwater fish has been due mostly to degradation of their habitats and water quality. To halt and reverse this negative trend, a new approach is needed urgently toward sustainability of fish resources. The UNESCO MAB programme on the role of land-water ecotones has opened a new perspective towards solving problems in landscape management and conservation. Land-water ecotones, if restored and managed in a sustainable way, can buffer and filter impacts on aquatic ecosystems due to catchment development, by moderating hydrological processes, improving water quality, and increasing spatial complexity of habitats. This way, fish resources can be safeguarded, restored and sustained. The programme of the 'Fish and Land-Inland Water Ecotones' (FLIWE) team has shown strong links between fish life histories and structures and processes in land-water ecotones. To be able to sustain freshwater fish populations a good understanding is needed of the biological linkages and pathways through land-water ecotones; of biogeochemistry; of modern techniques for habitat inventories; and of methods of habitat evaluation, planning and assessment of socio-economic feedback.
Authors present the hypothesis that freshwater fish diversity, recruitment and production depend greatly on riparian ecotones. These boundary environments are usually the most diverse elements of aquatic systems. Riparian ecotones moderate the transfer of energy and materials from the land, provide a high load of organic matter including invertebrate food, and moderate competition and predation among animals living in them. Riparian ecotones provide feeding places and shelter for fish, and are particularly important for their reproduction and earliest life-history stages. The complexity and biological importance of riparian ecotones depend on the extent to which the system is self-regulating, which depends in turn on geology, physiography, climate, vegetation, human activity and the age of the system. By changing riparian ecotone character, fish density can be regulated through controlling reproduction and recruitment, and energy flow through the food chain can be controlled for management of water quality.
The roach preferred branches of spruce and juniper as artificial spawning substratum rather than pine and birch. Perch preferred birch over conifers. Thus altering the availability of spawning substrata in the littoral zone should be effective in controlling the density and structure of juvenile roach and perch communities in reservoirs. Density dependent processes affects the early life history of fishes. Surveys in the Sulejow Reservoir in 1994 and 1997 provide an example of how increased availability of prey fish in the littoral zone may influence a predator population. During early summer age-0 pikeperch formed two discrete groups, one in the littoral and the other in the pelagic zone. In the littoral pikeperch became piscivorous at c. 3 cm on the numerous juvenile cyprinids, and grew relatively fast (5.2->9 cm by mid-July 1994). Those in the pelagic where prey fish were scarcer fed chiefly on zooplankton and grew relatively slowly (4.2-6.6 cm by mid-July 1994). From the resulting bimodal length distribution the upper modal group (littoral) had a higher probability of surviving their first winter. These data suggest a critical role for the ecotonal habitats in the dynamics of the trophic cascade, and show possibilities for controlling symptoms of eutrophication.
To test the role of riparian ecotones in fish community dynamics three different sites along the Sorraia system, were selected. Each station has been under distinct anthropogenic pressure, and characterized by a mosaic of habitat conditions. Fish were collected by electrofishing from October 1991 to October 1993 using two distinct sampling scales, (50 m and small sectors defined according to discontinuities in the dominant vegetation). The variation in species abundance and distribution was correlated with physical factors. The results showed the preference of barbel and nase for riparian vegetation and greater depth and of roach for zones with macrophytic vegetation and high current velocity. Fish community of the Sorraia system does not exhibit a consistent pattern of temporal variation, what is usually observed in Southern streams of the Iberian Peninsula. This fact is probably related to the landscape disturbance.
Riparian ecotones are either within the bankfull lines (instream ecotones) or beyond (bank vegetation and floodplains). Instream ecotones (e.g. gravel bars) are most intimately and permanently interconnected with the stream system. The third order river Melk was channelized some decades ago with devastating effects on the fish fauna. The restoration of instream ecotones and of the riparian vegetation improved the fish population immediately. Instream ecotones are equally important for the fish community in high order streams. Data are given for the 9th order Danube. The duration of floodplain inundation is unpredictable but generally short in the temperate climatic zone. Fish do not migrate far into the inundated terrestrial vegetation but stay in or near to the enlarged backwaters. In backwaters separated from the main stream, a potamal fish population survives in an otherwise rhithral stream section. Floodplain inundation is predictable and lasts over long periods in the tropics. Fish and invertebrates are adapted to use the vast resources of habitats and food by active migration into the inundated forests.
Today’s management of agricultural areas is hardly in accordance with actual economic and ecological goals. In view of the future risks for the global system a revolutionary change within our current land use systems is essential. The paper gives an example of a workable strategy for agricultural policy baded on the internalization of external burdens into a market price system as well as the expansion of property rights. Then it explains why sensible perspectives do exist, but are still not transformed into practical political measures or reforms.
Number of species (S), density (N) and standing crop (B) were investigated in 331 sites in the catchment of the Narew River, the biggest tributary of the Vistula, against 4 categories of riparian ecotone intensity in various-width rivers. All populations were first analyzed together, then within the scope of three most abundant ecological spawning groups. The image obtained is to some extent blurred by anthropogenic alterations as well as humancreated ecotones, yet it is evident that a total lack of bankside trees had a negative impact on the values of S, N and B of all investigated populations. Exceptions are only small streams of the Bialostocka Upland, where at a high percentage of submerged vegetation and occasionally stony bottom (washed away moraine bars), the lack of riparian trees did not cause any decrease in any of the three populational parameters. The uninterrupted compact forestation of the banks was positively correlated with S, N and B only in the lower Narew River, where the river bed was more than 100 m wide, hence where the access of light was not already limited. For lithophilous species a river's naturalness was a more important factor conditioning their abundance than the development of riparian ecotones. Indifferent species displayed a high, positive dependence on the development of ecotones, while phytophils (whose development is vegetation-dependent) formed the most qualitatively and quantitatively abundant populations at a weak, and in some rivers, even medium forestation of the banks.
Natural riverine ecosystems are characterized by a high level of heterogeneity manifest across a range of spatio-temporal scales. Ecotonal habitats are both the result of and contributors to the spatio-temporal dynamics of riverine ecosystems. Natural disturbances play an important rôle in maintaining a diversity of ecotonal habitats. A typology of riverine ecotones is developed that provides an expansive perspective scaled along four dimensions (longitudinal, lateral, vertical, and temporal) and that encompasses environmental gradients and boundaries as well as distinct transition zones between adjacent patches. From this broad perspective it is apparent that riverine ecotones play important rôles relating to speciation, evolutionary invasion of fresh waters, biodiversity, bioproduction, and ecological connectivity. River regulation disrupts the natural disturbance regime downstream, thereby reducing the diversity of ecotonal habitats and their connectivity with the main river channel. The altered rôle of ecotonal habitats induced by regulation is especially pronounced in alluvial floodplaing rivers, which are characterized by a mosaic of habitat patches that collectively occupy a wide range of successional stages. Downstream hydrologic changes, such as truncated sediment transport and reductions in the frequency and intensity of flooding, typically lead to altered successional trajectories, desiccated floodplain waterbodies, severed migration pathways, and reduced exchange rates of nutrients and organic detritus across ecotone boundaries. Effective management of regulated rivers should focus on maintaining or restoring the important rôles of ecotones by re-establishing interactive pathways and by reconstituting a disturbance regime that leads to a diversity of habitat patches and successional stages.
The effect of riparian ecotone functional complexity and stream hydraulics on an upland river ecosystem has been analysed. The amount of nutrients retained by the bottom sediment was lowest on a sandy substrate and highest in wetland bays. A stream bed covered by Berula erecta had about three times higher nutrient retentive capacity than did a sandy substrate. The trophic potential of CPOM, measured as total protein, was significantly correlated with the amount of deposited CPOM and depended on stream order. Macroinvertebrate biomass was highest at an intermediate riparian ecotone complexity with an adequate supply of organic matter and incident light. Fish biomass followed the same trend, being lowest in heavily shaded areas and in open channels without riparian vegetation, but highest in ecotones of intermediate complexity. These results indicate that the riparian ecotone structure and the heterogeneity of the stream channel may regulate biodiversity, productivity and nutrient retention in the fluvial corridor.
This review summarises some results of investigation carried out by Russian scientists, concerning the influence of land/inland water ecotones on fish. The main objectives and hypotheses developing in the framework UNESCO MAB working group "Fish and land/inland ecotones" in Russia are: comparison of fish population in salmonid rivers affected or non-affected by lake-rivers ecotones; small scale ecotone studies of model and restored microhabitat of salmonid rivers; comparison of the ecotone patterns and fish abundance in two rivers differing by historical origin of their ichthyofauna; the analysis of the effect of cattle ranching on fish assemblages distribution, dynamics and productivity along a river course in the steppe zone; and the influence of periodically drying up lakes and ecotones on the dynamics of fish populations in the connected river system.
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