Conservation of Stream Fishes: Patterns of Diversity, Rarity, and Risk |
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Authors: | ANDREW L SHELDON |
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Institution: | Zoology Department University of Montana Missoula, MT 59812, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Abstract: North America has a rich fauna of freshwater fishes which attains greatest diversity in the central and southeastern United States. Many stream fishes have limited ranges and are locally rare and patchily distributed. Local diversity increases downstream and total diversity follows typical species-area relationships. Drainages linked with the large Mississippi system support more species than those of comparable area flowing directly to the sea and rivers isolated by falls have notably few species. The between-drainage component of diversity is large. Threats to this fauna, which are not addressed by management focused on threatened species, include fragmentation of drainage networks by impoundments and homogenization of faunas by interbasin connections and introductions. Conservation efforts require a biogeographic perspective; they should focus on streams of intermediate size (orders 4–6) plus the upstream portion of each drainage and should attempt to maintain total diversity and, inclusively, populations of rare or threatened species. |
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