Abstract

The present study investigates effects of three different types of freshet events (varying in intensity, duration, and period of discharge) on the early life stages of fish, macroinvertebrates inhabiting in the water column, and the environmental conditions within the hiperturbid estuary of the Guadalquivir River. Freshet events compressed the salinity gradient and increased turbidity; during the most intense freshet event, the oxygen concentration also decreased. These environmental changes had significant effects on the abundance and distribution of aquatic organisms, reducing the nursery area from 40 km upstream to 20 or 10 km, depending on the freshet. Recovery of physicochemical conditions was relatively rapid (within one or two weeks) for less intense freshets, while the most intense event showed only partial recovery even one month later. Biological responses varied among species and time periods. Pelagic species (e.g., anchovies) were flushed out of the estuary. The populations of these species can show a posterior reintroduction and a recovery to levels similar to before the freshet, or a nonrecovery, probably depending on larval supplied from the offshore stock. In contrast, benthic and estuarine species (e.g., gobies, mysids), were just displaced downstream during the freshets. In the most intense freshet event, which occurred before the high recruitment period of these species (early spring), their abundances increased significantly, exceeding the levels of normal years (without freshets). This suggests that, depending on the intensity and the period in which the freshet occur, they could act as attraction signals for certain species. In general, estuarine and benthic species, such as gobies and other macroinvertebrates, coped better with freshets than pelagic marine migrant species, such as anchovies. However, the estuary and its estuarine organisms showed high resilience to environmental fluctuations.

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