Ecological Indicators (Nov 2022)

Projected stream fish community risk to climate impacts in the Northeastern and Midwestern United States

  • Nicholas Sievert,
  • Craig Paukert,
  • Joanna Whittier,
  • Wesley Daniel,
  • Dana Infante,
  • Jana Stewart

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 144
p. 109493

Abstract

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Climate change is expected to alter stream fish habitat potentially leading to changes in the composition and distribution of fish communities. In the Northeastern and Midwestern United States we identified the distribution and characteristics of those fish communities most and least at risk of experiencing changes in climate which deviate from the climate they are associated with. We classified stream fish communities based on a suite of climate and environmental variables with multivariate regression trees under both recent and future conditions based on eight climate models. Our findings showed that some areas, such as the majority of the Illinois, Wisconsin, and Iowa), have high levels of risk of change in stream class, while much of Kentucky, West Virginia, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Eastern Ohio, Southern Michigan, and the Atlantic Coast are at relatively low risk. Stream class shifts ranged from over 75% of segments lost (associated with cooler temperatures) to gains of over 40% (associated with warmer temperatures). Common warmwater species such as green sunfish (Lepomis cyanellus), bluegill (Lepomis macrochirus) and largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides) are expected to have the largest net gains in associated stream classes, while species associated with cooler streams such as Southern redbelly dace (Chrosomus erythrogaster), slimy sculpin (Cottus cognatus), and Eastern blacknose dace (Rhinichthys atratulus) were expected to experience the largest proportional losses. By pairing our climate risk predictions with other stressors such anthropogenic land use, habitat fragmentation, and water quality impairment, we identified opportunities for preservation (low risk due to all threats), restoration (low risk due to climate, high risk due to other stressors), and adaptation (high climate risk with low risk from other stressors). Understanding which communities are at risk due to climate change will aid in developing adaptation strategies to help sustain them in the future.

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