Influence of hydrological variability and life history strategy on riverine fish assemblages in the Australian wet‐dry tropics

Author:

King Alison J.123ORCID,Olden Julian D.4ORCID,Luiz Osmar J.15ORCID,Kennard Mark J.6ORCID,Adair Brendan1,Crook David A.17ORCID,Douglas Michael M.8,Saunders Thor M.79,Wedd Dion17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods Charles Darwin University Darwin Northern Territory Australia

2. CSIRO, Environment Albury New South Wales Australia

3. Gulbali Institute, Charles Sturt University Albury New South Wales Australia

4. School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

5. CSIRO, Environment Darwin Northern Territory Australia

6. Australian Rivers Institute Griffith University Nathan Queensland Australia

7. NSW Department of Primary Industries Buckingbong Road, Narrandera New South Wales Australia

8. School of Biological Sciences, School of Agriculture and Environment The University of Western Australia Perth Western Australia Australia

9. Department of Primary Industry and Fisheries Darwin Northern Territory Australia

Abstract

AbstractRiverine fish assemblages are strongly influenced by attributes of the flow regime. Tropical savannah river systems have distinct and predictable hydrologic seasonality, reflecting the wet‐dry climate, but can vary substantially in terms of dry season flow permanency and wet season flow‐pulse characteristics. Understanding how flow permanence and variability influence fish assemblages, and whether these factors can be used to predict responses to future hydrological change, are key knowledge gaps that impede effective management. We examined the influence of hydrological variability on the structure and diversity of freshwater fish assemblages across rivers of the wet‐dry tropics of northern Australia. We found distinct fish assemblages that varied predictably across three hydrological river types: Intermittent, Perennial Stable and Perennial Flashy flow regimes. This distinction emerged despite a common species pool across the region. Species richness was greatest in rivers with Perennial Stable flow regimes, whereas beta‐diversity was greatest in Intermittent rivers. However, life history strategies of constituent species were generally poor predictors of species abundances within each hydrological river type. The distinct fish assemblages evident among hydrological classes may provide some cautious ability to both predict potential fish assemblage changes with future hydrological changes (e.g. if perennial streams became more flashy or intermittent), and to predict fish assemblages expected in unsampled rivers with particular hydrological characteristics. Our findings provide further support for the importance of maintaining regional flow‐habitat heterogeneity and the connectivity between hydrological river types, and their essential role for conserving tropical fish species diversity into an uncertain hydrological future.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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