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Impact of multiple stressors on the fish community pattern along a highly degraded Central European river - a case study
- 1.0541421 - ÚBO 2022 RIV CZ eng J - Journal Article
Jurajda, Pavel - Streck, G. - Roche, Kevin - Janáč, Michal - Jurajdová, Zdenka
Impact of multiple stressors on the fish community pattern along a highly degraded Central European river - a case study.
Journal of Vertebrate Biology. Roč. 70, č. 1 (2021), č. článku 20066. E-ISSN 2694-7684
R&D Projects: GA ČR(CZ) GBP505/12/G112
EU Projects: European Commission(XE) 511237 - MODELKEY
Institutional support: RVO:68081766
Keywords : Bílina river * fresh-water * quality * health * ecosystems * toxicants * toxicity * channelisation * fish assemblage * oxygen sag * river zonation * toxic pollution
OECD category: Zoology
Impact factor: 1.460, year: 2021
Method of publishing: Open access
https://bioone.org/journalArticle/Download?fullDOI=10.25225%2Fjvb.20066
In this study, we provide a descriptive assessment of how chemical and hydro-morphological stressors have affected the fish community along one of the most impacted rivers in Central Europe. In addition to the toxicity of combined pollutants (expressed in toxic units), a range of hydro-morphological characteristics were measured to assess which stressors have had an impact. No longitudinal spatial trend was observed in fish assemblage characteristics as individual sites were affected by different stressors. Instead, five largely artificial assemblage 'zones' were identified corresponding to different combinations of stressors. Water quality (principally dissolved O-2) and hydromorphology were the main drivers affecting fish presence and density, with self-purification processes, restocking from tributaries and geomorphology promoting fish survival and/or recovery, despite increasing toxic pressure downstream. Our results suggest that a) toxic units alone are insufficient to establish causative factors in fish community loss as they do not take account of hydro-morphological stressors, many of which interact with and/or mask each other, and b) that a single WFD monitoring site in such heavily impacted rivers is insufficient to assess ecological status, rather, the ecological status of specific 'zones' (identified based on fish assemblage structure, habitat and water quality) should be assessed, with the ultimate aim of merging the zones and returning the river to a single functioning longitudinal ecosystem, accepting that this is unlikely to resemble the natural pre-industrial status of the river.
Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0318980
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