Abstract
1. Juvenile fish were sampled by electrofishing using the point abundance sampling method from August to November 1991 in the Lower Rhône River. Variations in fish abundance between point samples were partitioned according to three spatial scales of habitat heterogeneity.2. The compartment scale, differentiating channel and ‘dike fields’ (an area marginal to the main channel partially enclosed by an artificial embankment), was associated with variation in water current, temperature and biological productivity. Every juvenile fish species studied was more abundant in the dike fields, using them as a nursery.3. Within both compartments (i.e. main channel and dike fields), the same five bank types were represented, defining the intermediate scale of habitat heterogeneity. In the dike fields, beaches were selected by most of the species, whereas steep silt banks were more often selected in the main channel.4. After having removed the variation explained at the two larger habitat scales, only depth and shelter were found to have a significant effect on fish abundance at the microhabitat scale.5. When compared with a classical single‐scale approach, the multi‐scale approach was found to explain a greater amount of fish abundance variations and to facilitate the interpretation of observed patterns by scaling the species’ responses to habitat heterogeneity. The difference between the amounts of variation explained was proposed as a measure of how much habitat selection is hierarchical.
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