USGS - science for a changing world

Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center

 

Patchiness in a Large Floodplain River: Associations Among Hydrology, Nutrients, and Fish Communities

De Jager, N. R. and J. N. Houser.  2016. Patchiness in a Large Floodplain River: Associations Among Hydrology, Nutrients, and Fish Communities.  On-Line First River Res. Applic. DOI: 10.1002/rra.3026

Abstract

Large floodplain rivers have internal structures shaped by directions and rates of water movement. In a previous study, we showed that spatial variation in local current velocities and degrees of hydrological exchange creates a patch-work mosaic of nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations and ratios in the Upper Mississippi River. Here, we used long-term fish and limnological data sets to test the hypothesis that fish communities differ between the previously identified patches defined by high or low nitrogen to phosphorus ratios (TN:TP) and to determine the extent to which select limnological covariates might explain those differences. Species considered as habitat generalists were common in both patch types but were at least 2 times as abundant in low TN:TP patches. Dominance by these species resulted in lower diversity in low TN:TP patches, whereas an increased relative abundance of a number of rheophilic (flow-dependent) species resulted in higher diversity and a more even species distribution in high TN:TP patches. Of the limnological variables considered, the strongest predictor of fish species assemblage and diversity was water flow velocity, indicating that spatial patterns in water-mediated connectivity may act as the main driver of both local nutrient concentrations and fish community composition in these reaches. The coupling among hydrology, biogeochemistry, and biodiversity in these river reaches suggests that landscape-scale restoration projects that manipulate hydrogeomorphic patterns may also modify the spatial mosaic of nutrients and fish communities. Published 2016. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.

Keywords
blue gill; connectivity; diversity; hydrology; shiner; landscape; limnology

Accessibility FOIA Privacy Policies and Notices

Take Pride in America logo USA.gov logo U.S. Department of the Interior | U.S. Geological Survey
URL: http://www.umesc.usgs.gov/documents/publications/2016/dejager_a_2016.html
Page Contact Information: Contacting the Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center
Page Last Modified: August 15, 2016