Abstract

We used a spatial survey of fish assemblage structure in streams and beaver ponds to: (1) determine the effects of beavers on fish assemblage structure at the reach and drainage basin scales, and (2) assess the influences of pond age, watershed position, and pond environment on fish assemblage structure within beaver ponds. Stream impoundment by beavers affected species richness at the reach scale, but this effect was highly dependent on pond age and drainage area above the pond. In headwater streams, species richness per pond increased to a high in ponds 9–17 yr old and then decreased to a low in ponds >17 yr old. Farther downstream, species richness showed little change with pond age. Assemblage structure varied significantly among unimpounded, impounded, and previously impounded stream reaches, and variation in assemblage structure among ponds was related to pond age and physical habitat. In large ponds there was a shift from lotic to lentic species, and as ponds aged, small-bodied minnows were replaced by larger predators. Because there was high species turnover among impounded and previously impounded reaches, beavers affected patterns of species richness at the drainage basin scale; we collected more species in first- and second-order streams (32 and 38, respectively) than in third-order streams (26). Taken together these results indicate: (1) that beavers have a positive effect on fish species richness in low-order, blackwater streams, but maintenance of this effect requires preservation of both spatial and temporal dynamics of beaver pond creation and abandonment, and (2) the positive relationship between stream fish species richness and drainage area described for many streams may be a recent phenomenon resulting from the extirpation of beavers from much of their historical range.

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