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  4. Seasonal and diurnal patterns of littoral microhabitat use by fish in gravel pit lakes, with special reference to supplemented deadwood brush piles
 
Verlagslink DOI
10.1007/s10750-023-05152-3

Seasonal and diurnal patterns of littoral microhabitat use by fish in gravel pit lakes, with special reference to supplemented deadwood brush piles

Veröffentlichungsdatum
2023
Autoren
Maday, Andreas  
Matern, S.  
Monk, Christopher  
Klefoth, Thomas  
Wolter, Christian  
Arlinghaus, Robert  
Zusammenfassung
The habitat quality of the littoral zone is of key importance for almost all lentic fish species. In anthropogenically created gravel pit lakes, the littoral zone is often structurally homogenized with limited fish habitats. We supplemented deadwood brush piles in the littoral zone of eight gravel pit lakes and investigated the diurnal and seasonal use of this and other typical microhabitats by six dominant fish species. Shoreline habitats were sampled using point abundance electrofishing during day and night in all four seasons, and patterns of fish abundance were compared amongst unstructured littoral habitats, emerged macrophytes and brush piles. We caught a total of 14,458 specimens from 15 species in the gravel pit lakes. Complex shoreline structures were used by all fish species that we examined, especially during daytime, whilst the use of unstructured habitats was highest during night. The newly added brush piles constituted suitable microhabitats for selected fish species, perch (Perca fluviatilis), roach (Rutilus rutilus) and pike (Esox lucius), particularly during winter. Supplemented deadwood provides suitable fish habitat in gravel pit lakes and may to some degree compensate for the loss of submerged macrophytes in winter by offering refuge and foraging habitat for selected fish species.
Schlagwörter
Fish distribution

; 

Deadwood

; 

Habitat enhancement
Verlag
Springer
Institution
Hochschule Bremen  
Fachbereich
Hochschule Bremen - Fakultät 5: Natur und Technik  
Dokumenttyp
Wissenschaftlicher Artikel
Zeitschrift/Sammelwerk
Hydrobiologia  
Heft
850
Startseite
1557
Endseite
1581
Sprache
Englisch

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