Fish richness and species-habitat relationships in two coastal streams of French Guiana, South America |
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Authors: | Sylvie Mérigoux Dominique Ponton Bernard de Mérona |
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Institution: | (1) Centre ORSTOM de Cayenne, B.P. 165, 97323 Cayenne Cedex, French Guiana, France;(2) Centre ORSTOM de Cayenne, B.P. 165, 97323 Cayenne Cedex, French Guiana, France;(3) Present address: Laboratoire d'écologie des eaux douces, Université Claude Bernard Lyon I, ESA CNRS 5023, France |
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Abstract: | We examined the factors controlling fish species richness and taxa-habitat relationships in the Malmanoury and Karouabo coastal
streams in French Guiana between the short and long rainy seasons. The aims were to evaluate the environmental factors that
describe species richness on different scales and to define the ecological requirements of fish taxa in the two streams at
that period of the year. We sampled ten regularly spaced freshwater sites in each stream with rotenone. We caught a total
of 7725 individuals representing 52 taxa from 21 families and 6 orders. More taxa were caught in the Malmanoury (n=46) than
in the Karouabo stream (n=37). These values augmented by the number of fish taxa caught only by gill nets in a parallel survey
fitted very well to a log-log model of fish richness versus catchment area in Guianese rivers. Most of the fish taxa encountered
in the Malmanoury and Karouabo streams were of freshwater origin and nearly all the fish species caught in these two small
coastal streams were also found in the nearby Sinnamary River with the exceptions of the cichlid Heros severus and the characid
Crenuchus spirulus. Moreover, no significant relationship was found between a size-independent estimate of fish richness and
distance from the Ocean. Thus, despite their coastal position, the Malmanoury and Karouabo streams contained fish assemblages
with strong continental affinities. At a local scale, independently of site size, those with relatively more habitat types
harbored a relatively greater number of fish taxa. Canopy cover, water conductivity and bank length were the most important
environmental variables for fish assemblage composition at that period of the year. Oxygen and vegetation participated also
in defining fish habitat requirements but to a lesser extent.
This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date. |
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Keywords: | neotropics fish assemblages environmental factors total and within habitat species richness fish-habitat associations |
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