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Flood regime, dam regulation and fish in the Upper Paraná River: effects on assemblage attributes, reproduction and recruitment

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TLDR
Information on the influence of dam-controlled floods on some fish assemblage attributes, reproduction and recruitment in the Upper Paran River floodplain is summarized, providing preliminary guidelines for dam operation upstream.
Abstract
The flood regime is the most important force determining seasonality in neotropical rivers. In the Upper Paran River floodplain, it is the primary factor influencing biological processes. The aim of this paper is to summarize information on the influence of dam-controlled floods on some fish assemblage attributes, reproduction and recruitment in the Upper Paran River floodplain, providing preliminary guidelines for dam operation upstream. Fish were collected in different habitats of the Upper Paran River floodplain (river, channels and lagoons) in the period from 1986 to 2001. The high water period in the Paran River usually occurs from November/December to April/May. Annual variation in the hydrograph affects species with distinct life history strategies differently, and influences the composition and structure of fish assemblages. Large floods were associated with higher species richness. Frequencies of individuals with ripe and partially spent gonads, which indicate spawning, were higher during the period of increasing water level. Dependence on floods seems to be lowest in sedentary species that develop parental care, and highest in large migratory species that spawn in the upper stretches of the basin and use flooded areas as nurseries. Migratory fishes were favored by annual floods that lasted more than 75 days, with longer floods yielding larger populations. The occurrence of high water levels at the beginning of summer is fundamental to the spawning success of migratory species. However, the flood may be less important for recruitment of juveniles if it is of short duration. Dam operation upstream (releasing more water during the raining season) has potential to promote greater floods with appropriate duration improving recruitment, particularly for migratory species.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Dams and the fish fauna of the Neotropical region: impacts and management related to diversity and fisheries.

TL;DR: The relevance and the success of the management actions taken are argued and some suggestions to improve conservation of the ichthyofauna in South American basins influenced by dams are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Aquatic invasive species: challenges for the future.

TL;DR: Impacts of AIS, factors limiting their dispersal, and the role that humans play in transporting AIS are described, including those that pave the way for invasions by other species (“invasional meltdown”).
Journal ArticleDOI

Large reservoirs as ecological barriers to downstream movements of Neotropical migratory fish

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed that large reservoirs impose a different kind of barrier to migrating fish: impoundments create a diffuse gradient of hydraulic/limnological conditions that affects fish behaviour and functions as an extensive environmental filter that discourages downstream movements.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fish‐Passage Facilities as Ecological Traps in Large Neotropical Rivers

TL;DR: If passages work as ecological traps, regional fisheries will be in danger of collapse and conservation policies toward biodiversity will become more difficult and ineffective.
References
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Book

Ecology of teleost fishes

TL;DR: The diversity of teleost fishes defining the problem organization of the text adaptive response to the environmental change and ways of studying the use of time and space are described.
Book

Ecological Studies in Tropical Fish Communities

TL;DR: In this paper, the African fish fauna and their distribution in the Great Lakes of eastern Africa are discussed. But the focus is on the diversity of tropical fish stocks rather than its maintenance and evolution.
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