Scientific Reports (Dec 2024)

Defining depth requirements to conserve fish assemblages from water take in an intermittent river

  • Daniel C. Gwinn,
  • Leah S. Beesley,
  • Bradley J. Pusey,
  • Michael M. Douglas,
  • Chris S. Keogh,
  • Oliver Pratt,
  • Tom Ryan,
  • Mark J. Kennard,
  • Thiaggo C. Tayer,
  • Caroline A. Canham,
  • Lewis G. Coggins,
  • Samantha A. Setterfield

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-81339-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract River systems once safeguarded from water development are being developed. This includes intermittent rivers that annually dry to a series of pools. Describing fish species relationships between abundance and pool depth can help managers set water-take rules that protect fish in dry-season pools. We sampled fish in main-channel and floodplain pools that spanned a gradient of depths and overcame sampling challenges by accounting for interacting effects of species mean length, environmental attributes, and sampling attributes on fish capture probabilities. Fish abundance-depth relationships varied systematically with species mean length, mesohabitat type (main channel, floodplain), water turbidity, and structural complexity, highlighting system complexity and the potential generality of abundance-depth relationships. Similarly, fish length moderated the effects of environmental attributes on capture probability for all sampling methods. We evaluated impacts of hypothetical water-take regulations on fish species’ distributions. Results suggested that water-take rules prohibiting draining of main-channel pools below 1.65 m and reducing floodplain pools by no more than 14% minimises impacts to species’ distributions, promoting conservation of the fish community. Additionally, our approach demonstrates the capacity of species length for predicting distributional and sampling patterns of fish species.

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