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Native and exotic Amphipoda and other Peracarida in the River Meuse: new assemblages emerge from a fast changing fauna
Authors:Guy?Josens  author-information"  >  author-information__contact u-icon-before"  >  mailto:gjosens@ulb.ac.be"   title="  gjosens@ulb.ac.be"   itemprop="  email"   data-track="  click"   data-track-action="  Email author"   data-track-label="  "  >Email author,Abraham?Bij?de?Vaate,Philippe?Usseglio-Polatera,Roger?Cammaerts,Frédéric?Chérot,Frédéric?Grisez,Pierre?Verboonen,Jean-Pierre?Vanden?Bossche
Affiliation:(1) Université Libre de Bruxelles, Service de systématique et d’écologie animales, av., Roosevelt, 50, cp 160/13, B-1050 Bruxelles;(2) Institute for Inland Water Management , Waste Water Treatment, Lelystad, The Netherlands;(3) Université de Metz, LBFE, équipe de Démoécologie, av. Général Delestraint, F-57070 Metz;(4) Centre de Recherche de la Nature, des Forêts et du Bois, DGRNE, Ministère de la Région wallonne, Avenue Maréchal Juin, 23, B-5030 Gembloux
Abstract:Samples issued from intensive sampling in the Netherlands (1992–2001) and from extensive sampling carried out in the context of international campaigns (1998, 2000 and 2001) were revisited. Additional samples from artificial substrates (1992–2003) and other techniques (various periods) were analysed. The combined data provide a global and dynamic view on the Peracarida community of the River Meuse, with the focus on the Amphipoda. Among the recent exotic species found, Crangonyx pseudogracilisis regressing, Dikerogammarus haemobaphesis restricted to the Condroz course of the river, Gammarus tigrinusis restricted to the lowlands and seems to regress, Jaera istriis restricted to the ‘tidal’ Meuse, Chelicorophium curvispinumis still migrating upstream into the Lorraine course without any strong impact on the other amphipod species. After a rapid expansion Dikerogammarus villosushas continued its upstream invasion between 1998 and 2002 at a rate of 30–40 km per year, but no further progression was noticed in 2003. Locally and temporarily the native species (Gammarus fossarum and G. pulex) and naturalized species (G. roeseliand Echinogammarus berilloni)mayhave been excluded by the most recent invaders (mainly D. villosus), but none of the native and naturalized species has disappeared completely. Therefore, the number of amphipod species found in the River Meuse has increased. Moreover, the native and naturalized species keep on dominating the tributaries from which the recent invaders seem to be excluded. A changing Peracarida community structure is observed along the course of the River Meuse: four native or naturalized species inhabit the upstream (Lorraine) course, three invasive species dominate in the middle reach (Ardenne-Condroz zone), one exotic species is housed in the Border Meuse and three or four invasive species dominate the assemblages in the lowlands.
Keywords:aquatic biodiversity  alien species  invasive species  invasibility  community dynamics   Dikerogammarus villosus    Chelicorophium curvispinum
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