Abstract

Non-native species are a major driver of biodiversity loss. Aquaculture activities play a key role in introductions, including the escape of fishes from fish farm facilities. Here, the impact of flooding due to El Niño rains in 2015/2016 in the Lower and Middle Paranapanema River basin, southern Brazil, was investigated by evaluating fish escapes from 12 fish farms. The flooding resulted in the escape of approximately 1.14 million fishes into the river, encompassing 21 species and three hybrids. Non-native species were the most abundant escapees, especially Oreochromisniloticus (Linnaeus, 1758) and Coptodonrendalli (Boulenger, 1897) (96% of all fish). Only seven native fishes were in the escapee fauna, comprising 1% of all fish. Large floods, coupled with inadequate biosecurity, thus resulted in considerable inputs of non-native fish into this already invaded system.

Highlights

  • Non-native species are a major driver of biodiversity loss

  • Freshwater aquaculture is strongly reliant on non-native fish species, which often become a problem when they escape (De Silva et al 2009, Ortega et al 2015, Davies and Britton 2016, Pelicice et al 2017)

  • More tilapia is produced in their invasive range than in their native African range (Gozlan et al 2010)

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Summary

SHORT COMMUNICATION

Escapes of non-native fish from flooded aquaculture facilities: the case of Paranapanema River, southern Brazil. Armando César Rodrigues Casimiro, Diego Azevedo Zoccal Garcia, Ana Paula Vidotto-Magnoni, John Robert Britton, Ângelo Antônio Agostinho, Fernanda Simões de Almeida, Mário Luís Orsi

Amazon and Orinoco River basins x Upper Paraná River basin
Findings
LITERATURE CITED

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