Abstract

The Lhasa River is one of the five tributaries of the Yarlung Zangbo River. It is the main industrial, agricultural and animal husbandry area in Tibet. It plays an important ecological security barrier role in regulating regional climate and maintaining biodiversity. In order to understand the resource utilization ability and relationship of fish in Lhasa River, and provide basic data for the protection and sustainable utilization of fish diversity in Lhasa River, the fishery resources in September 2019 (autumn), June 2020 (summer), November 2020 (winter) and March 2021 (spring) were investigated for the first time. The main fish in the catch were determined by the Index of Relative Importance (IRI). Shannon index and Pianka’s index were used to analyze the niche breadth and overlap values of the main fish caught in Lhasa River Basin from three dimensions of time, space and space–time. The results show that a total of 1399 fish of 3 orders and 4 families were collected. Among them, there is one dominant species, Schizopygopsis younghusbandi, and five common species, Schizothorax waltoni, Schizothorax oconnori, Ptychobarbus dipogon, Triplophysa stenura and Carassius auratus. The spatial–temporal niche breadth ranges from 1.395 to 3.628. They are Schizopygopsis younghusbandi, Carassius auratus, Ptychobarbus dipogon, Schizothorax oconnori, Triplophysa stenura and Schizothorax waltoni in a declining order. The temporal niche breadth is generally small, indicating that the survival activities of the main fish are greatly affected by seasonal changes. The fluctuation range of spatial–temporal overlap value is 0–0.535, and only 20% of the total logarithm is meaningful. The species pairs with temporal niche overlap values exceeding 0.300 reached 80%, while the spatial niche overlap value is generally low. The results show that the spatial and temporal distributions of the main fish in Lhasa River were quite different, and the spatial and temporal niche overlap value of the relationship between species is obviously affected by the change in spatial distribution. This demonstrates that the competition relationship and intensity of the main fish are quite different in different spatial positions.

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