Estimating Fish Species Richness across Multiple Watersheds

Assessing fish species richness at the scale of an entire watershed or multiple watersheds is important when designing conservation areas and maintaining aquatic biodiversity. Estimating biodiversity at this scale requires considering the effects of habitat heterogeneity within and across drainages...

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Main Author: Michael H. Paller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-06-01
Series:Diversity
Subjects:
USA
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1424-2818/10/2/42
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spelling doaj-6dc795eb6b204293a442e16f12e86e632020-11-25T02:35:45ZengMDPI AGDiversity1424-28182018-06-011024210.3390/d10020042d10020042Estimating Fish Species Richness across Multiple WatershedsMichael H. Paller0Environmental Sciences & Biotechnology, Savannah River National Laboratory, 999-W, Aiken, SC 29802, USAAssessing fish species richness at the scale of an entire watershed or multiple watersheds is important when designing conservation areas and maintaining aquatic biodiversity. Estimating biodiversity at this scale requires considering the effects of habitat heterogeneity within and across drainages on the species-area relationship (SAR). I examined the SAR using unusually complete data to assess fish species richness in minimally disturbed watersheds on large public lands in the Sand Hills ecoregion, southeastern United States of America (USA). My objectives were to compare (1) true richness with estimates produced by different species richness estimators and sampling designs and (2) species richness among reservations. Accurate estimates were obtained for five contiguous watersheds (780 km2 total) by using Chao 2 or first-order jackknife estimators, coupled with (1) a stratified design that apportioned sampling effort over 25 sample sites based on major spatial correlates of assemblage composition, including stream size and drainage basin identity and (2) sufficient sampling effort to collect enough individuals to include rare species. The greatest species richness was in streams within a large land holding characterized by greater instream habitat diversity, less disturbed land coverage, more forested land, and closer proximity to source pools than other reservations. Species richness in these streams was within the range observed in high diversity Neotropical and Indomalayan realms.http://www.mdpi.com/1424-2818/10/2/42stream fishspecies richnessdrainage basinsspecies-area relationshipspecies richness estimatorssampling effortsampling designSand Hills ecoregionUSA
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael H. Paller
spellingShingle Michael H. Paller
Estimating Fish Species Richness across Multiple Watersheds
Diversity
stream fish
species richness
drainage basins
species-area relationship
species richness estimators
sampling effort
sampling design
Sand Hills ecoregion
USA
author_facet Michael H. Paller
author_sort Michael H. Paller
title Estimating Fish Species Richness across Multiple Watersheds
title_short Estimating Fish Species Richness across Multiple Watersheds
title_full Estimating Fish Species Richness across Multiple Watersheds
title_fullStr Estimating Fish Species Richness across Multiple Watersheds
title_full_unstemmed Estimating Fish Species Richness across Multiple Watersheds
title_sort estimating fish species richness across multiple watersheds
publisher MDPI AG
series Diversity
issn 1424-2818
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Assessing fish species richness at the scale of an entire watershed or multiple watersheds is important when designing conservation areas and maintaining aquatic biodiversity. Estimating biodiversity at this scale requires considering the effects of habitat heterogeneity within and across drainages on the species-area relationship (SAR). I examined the SAR using unusually complete data to assess fish species richness in minimally disturbed watersheds on large public lands in the Sand Hills ecoregion, southeastern United States of America (USA). My objectives were to compare (1) true richness with estimates produced by different species richness estimators and sampling designs and (2) species richness among reservations. Accurate estimates were obtained for five contiguous watersheds (780 km2 total) by using Chao 2 or first-order jackknife estimators, coupled with (1) a stratified design that apportioned sampling effort over 25 sample sites based on major spatial correlates of assemblage composition, including stream size and drainage basin identity and (2) sufficient sampling effort to collect enough individuals to include rare species. The greatest species richness was in streams within a large land holding characterized by greater instream habitat diversity, less disturbed land coverage, more forested land, and closer proximity to source pools than other reservations. Species richness in these streams was within the range observed in high diversity Neotropical and Indomalayan realms.
topic stream fish
species richness
drainage basins
species-area relationship
species richness estimators
sampling effort
sampling design
Sand Hills ecoregion
USA
url http://www.mdpi.com/1424-2818/10/2/42
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