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Fish assemblages of an African river floodplain: a test of alternative models of community structure
Authors:Andrew T. Jackson  Alphonse Adite  Katherine A. Roach  Kirk O. Winemiller
Affiliation:1. Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences, Texas A&M University, , College Station, TX, 77843 USA;2. PRECOB, Unité de Recherches sur les Zones Humides, Département de Zoology, Faculté des Sciences et Techniques, Université d'Abomey‐Calavi, , 01 BP 526 Cotonou, Bénin
Abstract:In the Oueme River, a lowland river in Benin, Africa, artificial ponds constructed in the floodplain (whedos) are colonised during the high‐water period by a presumably random sample of fishes from the river channel. As water slowly recedes from the floodplain, fishes are isolated in whedos until they are harvested near the end of the dry season. We surveyed fishes in whedos and adjacent main‐channel and floodplain habitats during two low‐water periods (2008 and 2009) and one falling‐water period (2010–2011) to evaluate the relevance of four alternative metacommunity models to these systems. In 2010–2011, we also measured a suite of physicochemical variables including dissolved oxygen, temperature, specific conductivity and per cent cover of aquatic vegetation. Whedos were covered with dense growth of aquatic vegetation, and dissolved oxygen concentrations were lower in whedos and a natural floodplain depression compared with the main channel. Multivariate analyses revealed that habitat types were distinct with regard to assemblage structure and abiotic conditions. Assemblages in whedos and natural floodplain depressions were differentiated from those of the river channel, with the floodplain habitats being dominated by piscivorous fishes that tolerate aquatic hypoxia. Dispersal, aquatic hypoxia and predation act in concert to shape local community structure. Patch dynamics, species sorting and mass effect models all were consistent with patterns in fish assemblage structure in this system. We conclude that the underlying mechanisms of drift, speciation, selection and dispersal ultimately may be more useful for explaining patterns in ecological communities than alternative metacommunity models.
Keywords:Benin  fish assemblage structure  floodplain  environmental filtering  aerial respiration  metacommunity
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