Movement patterns in wild Rineloricaria aequalicuspis

For the discussion of catfish systematics. Post here to draw our attention to new publications or to discuss existing works.
Post Reply
User avatar
bekateen
Posts: 9332
Joined: 09 Sep 2014, 17:50
I've donated: $40.00!
My articles: 4
My images: 141
My cats species list: 145 (i:105, k:35)
My aquaria list: 41 (i:18)
My BLogs: 45 (i:150, p:2730)
My Wishlist: 35
Spotted: 183
Location 1: USA, California, Stockton
Location 2: USA, California, Stockton
Contact:

Movement patterns in wild Rineloricaria aequalicuspis

Post by bekateen »

De Fries, L., Camana, M., Hartz, S.M. & FG Becker. (2021). Heterogeneous movement by a small non-migratory stream fish. Environ Biol Fish. 13pp. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10641-021-01194-5

https://link.springer.com/article/10.10 ... 194-5#Abs1
Abstract
Movement is a basic feature of fish ecology, being related to dispersal, recolonization, and recovery of local populations after disturbance. Non-migratory species are the main component of stream fish communities, especially in the Neotropics, but there is little information on the characteristics of their movement. In this capture-recapture study, we describe the individual movement of the armored catfish in a stream in southern Brazil. We also assess whether this species displays heterogeneous movement, as well as its degree of mobility and the relationship between individual fish movement and body size and local habitat characteristics. Data on individual fish positions were obtained monthly from November 2018 to March 2019, in ten 20-m stream sections along a 430-m stream stretch. Individual fish were captured by kick sampling and measured, photographed (for later photo-identification), and released back to the stream. The movement frequency distribution was moderately leptokurtic (kurtosis = 3.31), indicating heterogeneous movement with two groups of individuals, stationary and mobile. The maximum movement distances were 248 m and 208 m, downstream and upstream, respectively, while the mean movement distance was 98.6 m. Density of individuals was the main factor affecting the probability of movement, suggesting a role for resource availability and intraspecific interactions. The heterogeneous movement pattern observed for R. aequalicuspis indicates that intra-populational variability in movement behavior occurs in non-migratory stream species, which have been often assumed to be either sedentary or mobile species. We highlight that sedentary behavior should not be assumed a priori for stream fishes, not even for those species usually considered to be of low mobility, as many loricariids.
Keywords: Dispersal, Loricariidae, Mark recapture, Movement ecology
Attachments
Fig. 1 Geographical location of the study site and schematic representation of the sampling design at Escangalhado stream (Maquiné river basin, southern Brazil). Dashed rectangles represent the 20-m sampling sections. Black arrow indicates stream flow direction. A: Uppermost sampling section (Sect. 10). B: An intermediate section (Sect. 6). C: The lowermost sampling section (Sect. 1). Sampling was performed in upstream direction (from Sect. 1 to 10). Geographic coordinates of Sect. 1 (29.5671° S, 50.2854° W) and Sect. 10 (29.5703° S; 50.2893° W)
Fig. 1 Geographical location of the study site and schematic representation of the sampling design at Escangalhado stream (Maquiné river basin, southern Brazil). Dashed rectangles represent the 20-m sampling sections. Black arrow indicates stream flow direction. A: Uppermost sampling section (Sect. 10). B: An intermediate section (Sect. 6). C: The lowermost sampling section (Sect. 1). Sampling was performed in upstream direction (from Sect. 1 to 10). Geographic coordinates of Sect. 1 (29.5671° S, 50.2854° W) and Sect. 10 (29.5703° S; 50.2893° W)
Image
Find me on YouTube & Facebook: http://youtube.com/user/Bekateen1; https://www.facebook.com/Bekateen
Buying caves from https://plecocaves.com? Plecocaves sponsor Bekateen's Fishroom. Use coupon code bekateen for 15% off your order.
Also, for you Swifties: Https://youtu.be/ZUKdhXL3NCw
Post Reply

Return to “Taxonomy & Science News”