Luciana Alves Pereira, Leandro Castello, Eric Hallerman, Edson Rubens Ferreira Rodrigues, C. R. C. Doria, Fabrice Duponchelle
{"title":"洪水脉冲对亚马逊河流域法氏囊假单胞菌生长的影响","authors":"Luciana Alves Pereira, Leandro Castello, Eric Hallerman, Edson Rubens Ferreira Rodrigues, C. R. C. Doria, Fabrice Duponchelle","doi":"10.3390/fishes9060223","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Fish growth is a fundamental biological process driven by a multitude of intrinsic (within-individual) and extrinsic (environmental) factors that underpin individual fitness and population dynamics. Interannual variability in river hydrology regarding the intensity and duration of floods and droughts can induce interannual variations in the biotic and abiotic variables that regulate fish growth. However, the understanding of how interannual variability in river hydrology affects fish growth remains limited for most species and ecosystems. We evaluated how inter-annual hydrological variations within the Amazon River basin influence the growth of the catfish Pseudoplaystoma fasciatum. Our research questions were as follows: Do floods lead to the faster growth of P. fasciatum and droughts lead to the slower growth? And do floods and droughts affect all age classes in the same manner? We sampled 364 specimens of P. fasciatum from five sites in the Amazon basin, estimated their growth rates, and related the growth rates to indices of the intensity of floods and droughts. We fitted linear mixed-effects models to test the relationship between growth increments and hydrological indices (with F and D quantifying the intensities of floods and droughts, respectively), age as fixed effects, and basins and Fish ID as random effects. We found an inverse relationship between the increment width in the fish hard parts and hydrological indices. That is, intense floods and droughts negatively affected the growth rates. We also found that the growth of P. fasciatum was no different in years with intense and mild floods across age classes 1–5, although was different for age class 6. However, the growth of P. fasciatum was faster in years of mild droughts for all age classes. Our results showing that the growth of P. fasciatum was slower in years of intense droughts are supported by those of previous studies in the Amazon basin and elsewhere. However, our results showing for the first time that the growth of P. fasciatum is slower in years of intense flooding is the opposite of patterns found in other studies. These results thus suggest that the growth of P. fasciatum is maximized within an optimum range of hydrological conditions, where neither floods nor droughts are intense.","PeriodicalId":12405,"journal":{"name":"Fishes","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":2.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-06-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Flood Pulse Effects on the Growth of Pseudoplatystoma fasciatum in the Amazon Basin\",\"authors\":\"Luciana Alves Pereira, Leandro Castello, Eric Hallerman, Edson Rubens Ferreira Rodrigues, C. R. C. Doria, Fabrice Duponchelle\",\"doi\":\"10.3390/fishes9060223\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Fish growth is a fundamental biological process driven by a multitude of intrinsic (within-individual) and extrinsic (environmental) factors that underpin individual fitness and population dynamics. Interannual variability in river hydrology regarding the intensity and duration of floods and droughts can induce interannual variations in the biotic and abiotic variables that regulate fish growth. However, the understanding of how interannual variability in river hydrology affects fish growth remains limited for most species and ecosystems. We evaluated how inter-annual hydrological variations within the Amazon River basin influence the growth of the catfish Pseudoplaystoma fasciatum. Our research questions were as follows: Do floods lead to the faster growth of P. fasciatum and droughts lead to the slower growth? And do floods and droughts affect all age classes in the same manner? We sampled 364 specimens of P. fasciatum from five sites in the Amazon basin, estimated their growth rates, and related the growth rates to indices of the intensity of floods and droughts. We fitted linear mixed-effects models to test the relationship between growth increments and hydrological indices (with F and D quantifying the intensities of floods and droughts, respectively), age as fixed effects, and basins and Fish ID as random effects. We found an inverse relationship between the increment width in the fish hard parts and hydrological indices. That is, intense floods and droughts negatively affected the growth rates. We also found that the growth of P. fasciatum was no different in years with intense and mild floods across age classes 1–5, although was different for age class 6. However, the growth of P. fasciatum was faster in years of mild droughts for all age classes. Our results showing that the growth of P. fasciatum was slower in years of intense droughts are supported by those of previous studies in the Amazon basin and elsewhere. However, our results showing for the first time that the growth of P. fasciatum is slower in years of intense flooding is the opposite of patterns found in other studies. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
鱼类生长是一个基本的生物过程,由多种内在(个体内部)和外在(环境)因素驱动,这些因素是个体健康和种群动态的基础。河流水文在洪水和干旱的强度和持续时间方面的年际变化会引起调节鱼类生长的生物和非生物变量的年际变化。然而,对于大多数物种和生态系统而言,人们对河流水文年际变化如何影响鱼类生长的了解仍然有限。我们评估了亚马逊河流域的年际水文变化如何影响鲶鱼 Pseudoplaystoma fasciatum 的生长。我们的研究问题如下洪水是否会导致 fasciatum 的快速生长,而干旱是否会导致其缓慢生长?洪水和干旱对所有年龄段的影响是否相同?我们从亚马逊流域的五个地点采集了 364 个 P. fasciatum 标本,估算了它们的生长率,并将生长率与洪水和干旱强度指数联系起来。我们建立了线性混合效应模型来检验生长增量与水文指数(F 和 D 分别表示洪水和干旱的强度)之间的关系,年龄为固定效应,流域和鱼类 ID 为随机效应。我们发现,鱼类硬壳部分的增量宽度与水文指数之间存在反比关系。也就是说,强烈的洪水和干旱会对生长率产生负面影响。我们还发现,1-5 龄段的 P. fasciatum 在洪水猛烈年份和洪水温和年份的生长率没有差异,但在 6 龄段有所不同。然而,在轻度干旱的年份,所有龄级的 P. fasciatum 的生长速度都更快。我们的研究结果表明,在严重干旱的年份,P. fasciatum 的生长速度较慢,这与之前在亚马逊河流域和其他地方的研究结果相吻合。然而,我们的研究结果首次表明,在洪水严重的年份,P. fasciatum 的生长速度较慢,这与其他研究发现的模式相反。因此,这些结果表明,在洪水或干旱都不严重的最佳水文条件范围内,P. fasciatum 的生长速度是最大的。
Flood Pulse Effects on the Growth of Pseudoplatystoma fasciatum in the Amazon Basin
Fish growth is a fundamental biological process driven by a multitude of intrinsic (within-individual) and extrinsic (environmental) factors that underpin individual fitness and population dynamics. Interannual variability in river hydrology regarding the intensity and duration of floods and droughts can induce interannual variations in the biotic and abiotic variables that regulate fish growth. However, the understanding of how interannual variability in river hydrology affects fish growth remains limited for most species and ecosystems. We evaluated how inter-annual hydrological variations within the Amazon River basin influence the growth of the catfish Pseudoplaystoma fasciatum. Our research questions were as follows: Do floods lead to the faster growth of P. fasciatum and droughts lead to the slower growth? And do floods and droughts affect all age classes in the same manner? We sampled 364 specimens of P. fasciatum from five sites in the Amazon basin, estimated their growth rates, and related the growth rates to indices of the intensity of floods and droughts. We fitted linear mixed-effects models to test the relationship between growth increments and hydrological indices (with F and D quantifying the intensities of floods and droughts, respectively), age as fixed effects, and basins and Fish ID as random effects. We found an inverse relationship between the increment width in the fish hard parts and hydrological indices. That is, intense floods and droughts negatively affected the growth rates. We also found that the growth of P. fasciatum was no different in years with intense and mild floods across age classes 1–5, although was different for age class 6. However, the growth of P. fasciatum was faster in years of mild droughts for all age classes. Our results showing that the growth of P. fasciatum was slower in years of intense droughts are supported by those of previous studies in the Amazon basin and elsewhere. However, our results showing for the first time that the growth of P. fasciatum is slower in years of intense flooding is the opposite of patterns found in other studies. These results thus suggest that the growth of P. fasciatum is maximized within an optimum range of hydrological conditions, where neither floods nor droughts are intense.