Author:
Legrand Marion,Briand Cédric,Buisson Laëtitia,Artur Gwenaël,Azam Didier,Baisez Aurore,Barracou David,Bourré Nicolas,Carry Laurent,Caudal Anne-Laure,Charrier Fabien,Corre Jérémie,Croguennec Eric,Der Mikaélian Sophie,Josset Quentin,Le Gurun Laëtitia,Schaeffer Frédéric,Laffaille Pascal
Abstract
The decline and collapse of populations have been reported for a large range of taxa. Diadromous fishes migrate between fresh water and the sea and encounter many anthropogenic pressures during their complex life cycle. In spite of being of ecological, cultural and economic interest, diadromous fishes have been in decline for decades in many parts across the world. In this study, we investigated the change in five diadromous fish counts in France over a 30-year period using 43 monitoring stations located in 29 rivers across 18 catchments. Our hypothesis was that the counts of these species evolved in a contrasting way between catchments. We also tested the effect of five drivers potentially contributing to the observed trends: catchment, latitude, presence of commercial fisheries, improvement of ecological continuity and salmon stocking. We found contrasting trends in fish counts between species at the national scale, with some taxa increasing (Anguilla anguilla and Salmo trutta), some showing a slight increase (Salmo salar) and some decreasing (Alosa spp. and Petromyzon marinus). For each taxon, except Anguilla anguilla, we highlighted a significant catchment effect indicating contrasting trends between catchments and stations. However, we found no significant effect of catchment characteristics for any of the studied taxa.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Nature and Landscape Conservation,Water Science and Technology,Ecology,Aquatic Science
Reference142 articles.
1. Quantifying 60 years of declining European eel (Anguilla anguilla L., 1758) fishery yields in Mediterranean coastal lagoons
2. Environmental determinism of year-to-year recruitment variability of European eelAnguilla anguillain a small coastal catchment, the Frémur River, north-west France
3. A new look at the statistical model identification
4. Almeida PR, Quintella BR, Mateus CS, Alexandre CM, Pedro S. 2018. Diadromous fish in Portugal: status, threats and management guidelines. University of Algarve, Portugal, 28 p.
5. Anonyme. 2018. Plan de gestion anguille de la France − Rapport de mise en œuvre, France, 200 p.
Cited by
12 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献