Shoreline hardening affects species composition and condition of larval fishes in the Yangtze River: Implications for conservation and inshore habitat restoration

Author:

Wang Zhen123,Cao Juan13,Cheng Fei1,Keckeis Hubert2,Xie Songguang14

Affiliation:

1. The Key Laboratory of Aquatic Biodiversity and Conservation of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Institute of Hydrobiology Chinese Academy of Sciences Wuhan 430072 China

2. Functional and Evolutionary Ecology University of Vienna Vienna Austria

3. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing 100049 China

4. State Key Laboratory of Marine Resource Utilization in South China Sea Hainan University Haikou 570228 China

Abstract

AbstractInshore habitats play a crucial role in the downstream drift of larval fish in large rivers. Natural inshore habitats of most of the world's large rivers have been heavily degraded by shoreline stabilization measures, but the knowledge about consequences for the condition and distribution of larval fishes is extremely limited. Investigations during the peak season of larval drift into species composition as well as into feeding intensity and body injuries of representative taxa were conducted at different inshore mesohabitats along semi‐natural and stabilized shores in a free‐flowing section in the middle Yangtze River. Species were unambiguously identified by a combination of DNA barcoding and morphological analyses. Overall, 37 taxa from seven families were detected from a total of 9,915 fish larvae caught. Earlier developmental stages greatly outnumbered the later stages in diversity and abundance in each investigated mesohabitat. Abundance and assemblage structure as well as the body injury rate differed significantly between mesohabitats. Generally, overall species richness and abundance tended to be lower, and divergence of the assemblage and body injury rates tended to be higher at heavily hardened shores, which could be contributed to the poor riparian vegetation and restricted suitable hydraulic conditions there. Our results may reflect the underestimated impact of inshore habitat degradation on larval fishes and highlight the demand for creating adequate areas of shallow and slow‐flow habitats with good riparian vegetation conditions along the shores. These measures will foster an appropriate connectivity between spawning areas and high‐quality nurseries for larval fishes.

Funder

China Scholarship Council

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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