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Fish fauna and fisheries of large European rivers: examples from the Volga and the Danube
Authors:Martin Schletterer  V. V. Kuzovlev  Y. N. Zhenikov  J. A. Tuhtan  G. Haidvogl  T. Friedrich  K. Górski  L. Füreder
Affiliation:1.Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust, Slimbridge,Gloucestershire,UK;2.Centre for Ecology & Hydrology,Edinburgh,UK;3.Department of Life & Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Science & Technology,Bournemouth University,Poole,UK
Abstract:The role of herbivores in regulating aquatic plant dynamics has received growing recognition from researchers and managers. However, the evidence for herbivore impacts on aquatic plants is largely based on short-term exclosure studies conducted within a single plant growing season. Thus, it is unclear how long herbivore impacts on aquatic plant abundance can persist for. We addressed this knowledge gap by testing whether mute swan (Cygnus olor) grazing on lowland river macrophytes could be detected in the following growing season. Furthermore, we investigated the role of seasonal changes in water current speed in limiting the temporal extent of grazing. We found no relationship between swan biomass density in 1 year and aquatic plant cover or biomass in the following spring. No such carry-over effects were detected despite observing high swan biomass densities in the previous year from which we inferred grazing impacts on macrophytes. Seasonal increases in water velocity were associated with reduced grazing pressure as swans abandoned river habitat. Furthermore, our study highlights the role of seasonal changes in water velocity in determining the length of the mute swan grazing season in shallow lowland rivers and thus in limiting the temporal extent of herbivore impacts on aquatic plant abundance.
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