Size spectra of lake fish assemblages: responses along gradients of general environmental factors and intensity of lake-use
1. The size structure of communities is shaped by biotic and abiotic interactions. Therefore,
comparative analyses of size spectra may reveal the major drivers governing patterns and
processes in size-structured communities.
2. We tested the suitability of non-taxonomic, size-related variables as tools for elucidating
systematic shifts in lake fish assemblages along the gradients of environmental factors and
lake-use intensity. Catch data of multimesh gillnets from 78 lowland lakes in northern
Germany were analysed.
3. We first identified the correlations, and hence inherent redundancy, among 18 sizerelated
variables. The correspondence between eight weakly correlated size variables and
descriptors of lake morphometry, lake productivity, lake-use intensity and taxonomic and
functional fish-assemblage composition was tested using ordination by non-metric
multidimensional scaling (NMDS). The three axes of the NMDS analysis were strongly
correlated with five size variables, which in turn corresponded to lake area, mean and
maximum depth, total phosphorus and chlorophyll a concentration, predator abundance
and predator ⁄prey length ratios (PPLR).
4. The number of size classes increased with increasing lake area. The slopes of normalised
length spectra were flatter (less negative) and size diversity was higher in deep, less
nutrient-rich lakes and in lakes with a higher numerical predator abundance, indicating a
higher relative abundance of large fish. The exponent of the Pareto type II mass spectra
was larger and maximum fish length was smaller in shallow, nutrient-rich lakes and in
lakes with lower predator biomass and smaller PPLR, indicating a higher relative
proportion of medium-sized fish.
5. Analyses of size spectra at regional scales can contribute important information to the
evaluation of the ecological quality of lakes. We suggest further studies at a broader range
of environmental and geographical scales to understand the subtle response of size-related
variables to biotic interactions, abiotic stressors and geographical patterns.
EMMRICH Matthias;
BRUCET Sandra;
RITTERBUSCH David;
MEHNER Thomas;
2011-11-04
WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING
JRC60622
0046-5070,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC60622,
10.1111/j.1365-2427.2011.02658.x,
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