Seasonal and hydrologic variation influences habitat and functional structure of stream fish assemblages

Frontiers in Enviornmental Science
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Abstract

Introduction: 

Hydrologic variability is a key driver of ecological structure in lotic systems, shaping habitat conditions, taxonomic diversity, and the functional traits that mediate species’ persistence and performance (e.g., reproductive success). While many studies examine taxonomic responses to variation in flows, few evaluate how spatiotemporal hydrologic variation influences the functional organization within stream fish communities.

Methods: 

We quantified seasonal habitat structure and functional trait diversity of fish assemblages across six Ozark Plateau headwater streams representing two contrasting flow regimes: Groundwater Flashy and Runoff/Intermittent Flashy. Fish and habitat data were collected seasonally during a dry year (2002) and a wet year (2003). Functional space was constructed using PCoA of morphological, ecological, and life-history traits, and functional diversity was measured using community weighted means (CWMs), functional richness (FRic), functional evenness (FEve), and functional divergence (FDiv).

Results: 

We found that habitat structure differed strongly by flow regime and season, with Runoff/Intermittent streams exhibiting pronounced reductions in depth, area, and velocity, while groundwater streams remained structurally stable. Functional identity of assemblages was similar across flow regimes, dominated by benthic, hydrodynamic taxa with opportunistic and periodic life-history strategies. However, functional structure differed significantly: FEve and FDiv were consistently lower in Runoff/Intermittent Flashy streams in both years, indicating assemblage dominance of species with similar trait combinations and reduced trait partitioning under variable flow. FRic and taxonomic richness remained stable across seasons and flow regimes, suggesting high functional redundancy despite species turnover.

Discussion: 

Together, results show that flow regime mediates both habitat structural stability and functional organization. As climatic warming and extreme drought increase hydrologic instability in headwaters, functional trait approaches provide a sensitive tool for detecting losses of functional roles that may not be evident by using taxonomic metrics alone.


Suggested Citation

Tevin, J.D., and Magoulick, D.D., 2026, Seasonal and hydrologic variation influences habitat and functional structure of stream fish assemblages: Frontiers in Enviornmental Science, v. 14, 1764275, 12 p., https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2026.1764275.

Study Area

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Seasonal and hydrologic variation influences habitat and functional structure of stream fish assemblages
Series title Frontiers in Enviornmental Science
DOI 10.3389/fenvs.2026.1764275
Volume 14
Publication Date March 09, 2026
Year Published 2026
Language English
Publisher Frontiers Media
Contributing office(s) Coop Res Unit Atlanta
Description 1764275, 12 p.
Country United States
State Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma
Other Geospatial Ozark Plateau
Additional publication details