Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 01 Aug 2005

Spatiotemporal Patterns of Fish Assemblage Structure in a River Impounded by Low-Head Dams

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Page Range: 539 – 549
DOI: 10.1643/CE-04-135R2
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Abstract

We studied spatiotemporal patterns of fish assemblage structure in the Neosho River, Kansas, a system impounded by low-head dams. Spatial variation in the fish assemblage was related to the location of dams that created alternating lotic and lentic stream reaches with differing fish assemblages. At upstream sites close to dams, assemblages were characterized by species associated with deeper, slower-flowing habitat. Assemblages at sites immediately downstream from dams had higher abundance of species common to shallow, swift-flowing habitat. Temporal variation in assemblage structure was stronger than spatial variation, and was associated with fish life history events such as spawning and recruitment, as well as seasonal changes in environmental conditions. Our results suggest that low-head dams can influence spatial patterns of fish assemblage structure in systems such as the Neosho River and that such assemblages also vary seasonally.

Copyright: The American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists
 Fig. 1. 
 Fig. 1. 

Map of study area in Lyon County, KS, showing eight study sites and two low-head dams along the Neosho River from Americus to Emporia


 Fig. 2. 
 Fig. 2. 

Plot of CA 1 vs. CA 2 scores by season for collections from the Neosho River, KS, 2000–01, grouped by impoundment treatment. Seasons were defined monthly as Winter (December–February), Spring (March–May), Summer (June–August), and Fall (September–November)


 Fig. 3. 
 Fig. 3. 

Plots of monthly mean and standard deviation collection CA 1 scores. Months not differing significantly, as determined by Tukey-Kramer tests on CA 1 scores, share lowercase letters. Means for which sample sizes were too small to calculate least square means used in Tukey-Kramer tests are denoted by an asterisk


Contributor Notes

(DPG, JST, DRE) Department of Biological Sciences, Emporia State University, Emporia, Kansas, 66801; (MLW) Columbia Environmental Research Center, Columbia, Missouri 65201. Present Addresses: (DPG) Department of Zoology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma 73019; (JST) Center for Biodiversity, Illinois Natural History Survey, Champaign, Illinois 61820. (DPG) dgillette@ou.edu Send reprint requests to DPG.

Accepted: 06 Apr 2005
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