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DOI10.1111/fwb.13260
Pockets of resistance: Response of arid-land fish communities to climate, hydrology, and wildfire
Gido, Keith B.1; Propst, David L.2,3; Whitney, James E.4; Hedden, Skyler C.1; Turner, Thomas F.2,3; Pilger, Tyler J.5
发表日期2019
ISSN0046-5070
EISSN1365-2427
卷号64期号:4页码:761-777
英文摘要

Disturbance regimes of arid regions throughout the world are changing along with global warming. Severity of drought associated with decreased stream discharge and increased frequency and intensity of wildfires are increasing in many of these systems. Combined, these factors can have potentially devastating effects on stream fish communities. To quantify the response of fish communities to annual variation in climate, hydrology, and wildfire, we used long-term and spatially extensive datasets from the Gila River drainage, NM, U.S.A. Additionally, we tracked the recovery of multiple fish communities within the study area following extreme drought and associated wildfires that occurred between 2011 and 2013. Twenty-nine years of monitoring at six sites, beginning in 1988, indicated that fish community richness and density were negatively associated with drought, as quantified by the Palmer Drought Severity Index. Ordination of fish species densities across these sites further suggested that native species were more sensitive to inter-annual variation in climate than non-native fishes. The resistance and resilience of fishes to drought and ash flows following the most severe series of wildfires on record between 2011 and 2013 were highly variable across sites and species. The percent of common species that were able to resist a significant decline ranged from 0 to 70%, depending on location. As of 2017, all but two species (one native and one non-native) had recovered at one or more sites. Although we hypothesised that the response to wildfire and drought that occurred between 2011 and 2013 should vary with body size and species provenance (native or non-native), this was not supported. Rather, resistance of fish communities to these events appeared to be driven primarily by spatial factors, such as intensity of disturbance, and resilience was driven by species ability to rapidly rebound from severely depressed numbers or immigrate from nearby refuge populations. Current climate trends suggest an increase in the intensity of disturbance associated with wildfire and drought; thus, maintenance of native biodiversity should focus on preservation of habitat integrity and connectivity among habitats that allows for recolonisation of disturbed habitats.


WOS研究方向Environmental Sciences & Ecology ; Marine & Freshwater Biology
来源期刊FRESHWATER BIOLOGY
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/96027
作者单位1.Kansas State Univ, Div Biol, Ackert Hall, Manhattan, KS 66506 USA;
2.Univ New Mexico, Dept Biol, Albuquerque, NM 87131 USA;
3.Univ New Mexico, Museum Southwestern Biol, Albuquerque, NM 87131 USA;
4.Pittsburg State Univ, Dept Biol, Pittsburg, KS 66762 USA;
5.FISHBIO, Chico, CA USA
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Gido, Keith B.,Propst, David L.,Whitney, James E.,et al. Pockets of resistance: Response of arid-land fish communities to climate, hydrology, and wildfire[J],2019,64(4):761-777.
APA Gido, Keith B.,Propst, David L.,Whitney, James E.,Hedden, Skyler C.,Turner, Thomas F.,&Pilger, Tyler J..(2019).Pockets of resistance: Response of arid-land fish communities to climate, hydrology, and wildfire.FRESHWATER BIOLOGY,64(4),761-777.
MLA Gido, Keith B.,et al."Pockets of resistance: Response of arid-land fish communities to climate, hydrology, and wildfire".FRESHWATER BIOLOGY 64.4(2019):761-777.
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