Abstract

Riverine environments have been threatened by anthropogenic perturbations worldwide, whereby their fish assemblages have been modified by habitat changes and nonendemic species invasions. We assessed changes in fish assemblages by comparing the species presence in historical and contemporary fish data in the Yellow River from 1965 to 2015. The temporal change in species assemblages was found with increased nonendemic species and fewer natives. Fish species richness of the river declined 35.4% over the past fifty years. Moreover, the decreased mean Bray–Curtis dissimilarity among reaches suggested that the fish assemblages of different reaches in the Yellow River were becoming more similar over time. However, temporal patterns of fish assemblages varied among reaches. In the upper Yellow River, higher species richness and more invasive species were found than those in the historical record, while the lower reaches experienced significant species loss. Dam constructions, exotic fish invasions, and flow reductions played the vital role in structuring the temporal fish assemblages in the Yellow River. It is suggested that river basins which experienced different types and levels of stressors by anthropogenic perturbations can produce varied effects on their temporal trends of species assemblages.

Highlights

  • With the rapid economic growth and urban expansion, aquatic environments have been threatened by biological invasions and anthropogenic perturbations which result from hydropower station, irrigation and industrial usage (Argent & Carline, 2004; Graf, 2006)

  • We examined temporal patterns in fish community structure among five reaches in the Yellow River by comparing species presences in historical surveys with recent data from 1965 to 2015

  • The analysis of similarities (ANOSIM) analysis performed with the total sample subdivided into three-­period groups showed that the Bray–Curtis dissimilarity between paired period in the Yellow River increased with the time intervals, and R value

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

With the rapid economic growth and urban expansion, aquatic environments have been threatened by biological invasions and anthropogenic perturbations which result from hydropower station, irrigation and industrial usage (Argent & Carline, 2004; Graf, 2006) Resulting changes to those riverine ecosystems could form a new water ecological environment which could affect the fish fauna composition by modifying the resistance to the disturbance or invasion (Hooper et al, 2005), and by altering the survival and reproduction of aquatic organisms (Miller, Williams, & Williams, 1989). As the earliest hydraulic resource development base, the Yellow River can offer an ideal location to evaluate the influence of changes caused by anthropogenic habitat alterations and introductions of alien fishes on fish assemblages, which may provide implications for the water conservancy development in the future. We discussed if environmental variables including dam constructions, exotic fish invasions, and flow reductions may be responsible for shaping current fish assemblages in the Yellow River

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
| CONCLUSIONS
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