Fish diversity in European lakes: geographical factors dominate over anthropogenic pressures
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Autor/a
Otros/as autores/as
Fecha de publicación
2013ISSN
1365-2427
0046-5070
Resumen
1. We aimed to distinguish the relative contributions of natural and anthropogenic local factors on
patterns of fish diversity in European lakes at different geographical scales.
2. We compiled data from standardised fish monitoring using multimesh benthic gill nets, information
on lake morphometry and on geographical, climatic and anthropogenic pressure variables from
1632 lakes in 11 European countries. By means of regression trees, we determined those natural and
anthropogenic factors and their thresholds that best predicted local fish diversity, density and mean
size. Generalised linear models were used to assess the influence of anthropogenic factors at smaller
geographical and morphometric scales.
3. Local fish species richness and diversity were related mainly to morphometric and (bio)geographical/
climatic variables. Larger and deeper lakes in warm areas tended to be the most species
rich and diverse. Fish density was related mainly to anthropogenically driven productivity but
also was sensitive to geographical/climatic factors. Thus, warmer and shallower lower-altitude
European lakes, which are usually more eutrophic, had higher fish densities than cold and deeper
higher-altitude lakes. Fish size increased with altitude and declined with increasing seasonality and
temperature.
4. After controlling for the natural factors, productivity had a positive effect on fish species richness
and diversity, whereas it negatively influenced fish size.
5. Our results suggest that macroecological patterns of lake fish diversity across Europe are best predicted
by natural factors. The contribution of anthropogenic factors to fish diversity was evident only
via the effect of eutrophication at smaller geographical scales, whereas no effect could be found from
hydromorphological pressures. From an applied perspective, these results suggest that bioassessment
and biodiversity evaluation might be most effectively conducted and interpreted locally, where anthropogenic effects on biodiversity become more apparent. At a macroecological scale, the strong
effect of environmental temperature on most components of fish diversity suggests future changes in
fish diversity as a consequence of climate change.
Tipo de documento
Artículo
Lengua
Inglés
Palabras clave
Biologia
Páginas
15 p.
Publicado por
Wiley
Citación
Brucet, S., Pedron, S., Mehner, T., Lauridsen, T. L., Argillier, C., Winfield, I. J., . . . Jeppesen, E. (2013). Fish diversity in European lakes: geographical factors dominate over anthropogenic pressures. Freshwater Biology, 58(9), 1779-1793. doi:10.1111/fwb.12167
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