Exploring functional flow heterogeneity in regulated flow regime: Fish species turnover along hydraulic gradients in an artificial waterway network |
| |
Authors: | Mitsuru Ohira Shinji Fukuda |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Department of International Environmental and Agricultural Science, Institute of Agriculture, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, Fuchu, Tokyo, Japan;2. Department of Environmental and Agricultural Engineering, Institute of Agriculture, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, Fuchu, Tokyo, Japan |
| |
Abstract: | Humans have altered river flows leading to a loss of connection with floodplain habitats. The expansion of agriculture in floodplains has resulted in landscapes dominated by irrigated farmland. A key challenge in water management is to conserve existing ecological communities and habitat heterogeneity, while simultaneously maintaining engineered infrastructure for agriculture. In this study, we focused on an artificial channel network for irrigation with a regulated flow regime and its function as habitat for various fish species. Differences in hydraulic conditions among channels and compositional changes in fish species were examined to clarify functional flow heterogeneity. Analyzed using pairwise Simpson dissimilarity among sampling reaches, species turnover was positively associated with Froude number (flow intensity) differences at intermediate discharges, and with differences in cross-sectional areas (flow magnitude) at low discharges. Drastic changes in inflows should be considered for the effective conservation of flow heterogeneity, even under a regulated flow regime. Improved engineering design to manage the hydraulic environment is one option for maintaining the ecological value of lateral waterbodies in human-dominated landscapes. Our findings provide insights into the importance of functional flow heterogeneity to conserve fish species diversity. |
| |
Keywords: | adaptive management agricultural landscape engineered infrastructure environmental flow flow regulation habitat heterogeneity |
|
|