Functional turnover in a prairie-river fish community over 130 years

Transactions of the American Fisheries Society
By: , and 

Metrics

1
Crossref references
Web analytics dashboard Metrics definitions

Links

Abstract

Objective

In many Great Plains rivers, functional turnover—the change in proportional dominance of members in biological communities that fill certain ecological roles—has occurred due to impoundment and habitat alteration. The Powder River of Montana and Wyoming remains one of the few unregulated prairie rivers, but long-term monitoring is limited, so we analyzed changes over time at the functional, assemblage, and species levels.

Methods

We used fish sampling data from 43 different sources collected from 1893 to 2022 to analyze trends in fish communities.

Result

Across the main-stem Powder River, Sand Shiner Miniellus stramineus and Channel Catfish Ictalurus punctatus substantially increased in abundance, whereas Sturgeon Chub Macrhybopsis gelida decreased. While most other species did not show significant changes in relative abundance (although the always rare Lake Chub Couesius plumbeus may have been extirpated), significant functional turnover occurred in the upper river due to increases in generalist feeders, predators, omnivores, and cavity-guarding species, with declines in benthic feeders, invertivores, and pelagic broadcast spawners, among others. Community and functional changes were more substantial in the upper river than in the lower river, possibly due to augmented streamflow from a major tributary.

Conclusion

Functional turnover within the upper river was substantial despite the relative stability of most individual species, even when the Sand Shiner—the most significantly increasing species—was excluded from analysis. This suggests small but consistent increases and decreases within functional groups, which cumulatively are likely impacting the ecosystem. We hypothesize a complex set of mechanisms causing these changes that offer avenues for future work. The collation of data from disparate studies and the resampling of even a limited number of historical fish collection locations can greatly aid in identifying potential fish community changes in systems where monitoring is limited.

Study Area

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Functional turnover in a prairie-river fish community over 130 years
Series title Transactions of the American Fisheries Society
DOI 10.1002/tafs.10479
Volume 153
Issue 5
Publication Date August 22, 2024
Year Published 2024
Language English
Publisher Wiley
Contributing office(s) Coop Res Unit Seattle
Description 16 p.
First page 525
Last page 540
Country United States
State Montana, Wyoming
Other Geospatial Powder River basin
Additional publication details