Low-head dams induce biotic homogenization/differentiation of fish
assemblages in subtropical streams
Abstract
Human-mediated introduction of cosmopolitan species and extirpation of
endemic species modify community similarity, resulting in
community-distinctiveness decrease or increase. Data from four basins in
the Wannan Mountains, China, was used to evaluate the effects of
low-head dams on patterns of fish faunal homogenization and
differentiation based on abundance data. We aimed to examine the spatial
changes in taxonomic and functional similarity of fish assemblages
driven by low-head dams, and whether the changes in fish assemblage
similarity differed between taxonomic and functional components. We
found that low-head dams significantly decreased the mean taxonomic
similarity but increased the mean functional similarity of fish
assemblages in impoundments for abundance-based approaches, suggesting
that taxonomic differentiation accompanied functional homogenization in
stream fish assemblages. Meanwhile, these results showed the importance
of population abundance in structuring fish faunal homogenization and
differentiation at small scales, especially when the major differences
among assemblages are in species abundance ranks rather than species
identities. Additionally, we also found only a weakly positive
correlation between changes in mean taxonomic and functional similarity,
and partial pairs exhibited considerable variation in patterns of fish
faunal homogenization and differentiation for taxonomic and functional
components. In conclusion, our study proved that changes in taxonomic
similarity cannot be used to predict changes in functional similarity.
Keywords: Low-head dam, Stream fish, Biotic homogenization and
differentiation, Taxonomic and functional diversities