Abstract

This study examined short-term changes of population size and distribution of two coexisting river amphipods after a major disturbance event – the closure of a new large dam on the Gojačka Dobra River (Central Croatia) in June 2010. In the pre-disturbance period, coexistence of the two species, the endemic moss specialist Echinogammarus cari and the widespread microhabitat generalist Gammarus fossarum , was promoted by differential microdistribution between two dominating types of microhabitats, moss and stony substrate. E. cari was dominant in mosses and G. fossarum on stony substrate, representing an excellent case of spatial niche partitioning between two species of river amphipods. Drastic change in water quality and increased load of suspended particles that accumulated in mosses soon after the dam closure were the main factors that contributed to E. cari rapid population decline at sites downstream of the new dam. G. fossarum was much less affected by such changes, exhibiting no drastic population decline and even an increase in population size after disturbance event at three examined sites. Hence, specialization of E. cari for moss microhabitats which enabled stable coexistence of the two species before damming made it more vulnerable to disturbance and resulted in dominance shift in moss microhabitats in favour of G. fossarum after dam closure. This shift might reduce the probability of E. cari population recovery downstream from the new dam and change its current conservation status from endangered to critically endangered if it completely disappears downstream of the dam. Urgent measures aimed at conservation of this endemic species are proposed and discussed.

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