Stream fish communities and their associations to habitat variables in a rain forest reserve in southeastern Brazil |
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Authors: | Pedro Gerhard Rosana Moraes Sverker Molander |
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Institution: | (1) Laboratório de Ecologia Animal, Escola Superior de Agricultura Luiz de Queiroz, Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil, Caixa Postal 09, Piracicaba, SP, 13.418-900, Brazil;(2) Golder Associates Brasil, Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, 20.040-009, Brazil;(3) Environmental Systems Analysis, Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg, 412 96, Sweden |
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Abstract: | This paper describes the spatial variability of fish communities and identifies patterns of association between fish communities and habitat variables, including anthropogenic factors. We sampled streams inside and in the surroundings of a rain forest reserve in the southeast of Brazil in the rainy season. We could distinguish three main groups of streams: upland streams (draining the upland, flat portions of the mountain ridge of Serra de Paranapiacaba), adventitious streams of clearwater mountain torrents (small streams draining confined valleys in the slopes of this sierra), and large streams of clearwater mountain torrents (relatively unconstrained large streams close to the foots of the mountains). Despite the high variability of fish communities associated with these streams we identified some patterns using exploratory statistical analyses. These patterns were corroborated by additional field observations and information from the scientific literature. The main differences in fish community composition and diversity among the three groups of streams are probably related to large-scale factors such as elevation and position of the stream in the watershed. However, differences within these three groups seem to be mostly due to site-specific factors. Differences of instream characteristics are likely to be caused by natural variability of the ecosystems but also, in some cases, by human disturbances like pollution from human settlements, agriculture and mining. |
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Keywords: | Atlantic rain forest fish habitat assemblage organization human impacts stream diversity |
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