Assessment of the conservation status of endemic sculpin Cottus haemusi (Cottidae) in the river Vit (Danube Tributary), northwest Bulgaria

Cottus haemusi (Marinov and Dikov, 1986. Acta Zool. Bulg. 3, 18–23) is an endemic fish species that is restricted to the upper tributaries of the river Vit, Northwest Bulgaria. After its discovery in 1986, no further investigation of the C. haemusi population has been conducted. The aims of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Petrova Uzunova E.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2011-11-01
Series:Knowledge and Management of Aquatic Ecosystems
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/kmae/2011071
id doaj-ea94cf76c19d4c78a6f27101ee70c2cf
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ea94cf76c19d4c78a6f27101ee70c2cf2020-11-25T00:14:20ZengEDP SciencesKnowledge and Management of Aquatic Ecosystems1961-95022011-11-0104031010.1051/kmae/2011071kmae110046Assessment of the conservation status of endemic sculpin Cottus haemusi (Cottidae) in the river Vit (Danube Tributary), northwest BulgariaPetrova Uzunova E.0Division of General and Applied Hydrobiology, Faculty of Biology, Sofia University Cottus haemusi (Marinov and Dikov, 1986. Acta Zool. Bulg. 3, 18–23) is an endemic fish species that is restricted to the upper tributaries of the river Vit, Northwest Bulgaria. After its discovery in 1986, no further investigation of the C. haemusi population has been conducted. The aims of the present study were to determine its current population status based on the distribution, abundance and size structure of the C. haemusi population and to analyse the main environmental parameters of its habitat. Five upland tributaries and the main river were examined in low-water periods in 2009 and 2010. Two-pass electrofishing surveys were performed at 14 sites to estimate species presence, abundance and size distribution. C. haemusi was only detected in two tributaries of the river Vit: Kostina and Toplja. The current investigation failed to find the species at previously recorded sites. The total distribution area of this species is estimated to be 16 200 m2. The observed abundance of the Vit sculpin ranged from 5.6 to 8.4 individuals·100 m–2, with a mean of 7.0 individuals·100 m–2. Investigation of the size structure revealed the relatively low contribution of one-summer-old individuals. Microhabitat preferences did not differ significantly from other European cottidae species. Only a higher percentage of cobbles distinguished sites with sculpins from those without. The restricted distribution and loss of the bullhead population from some localities in the river Vit could be explained by human disturbance and the deterioration of natural habitat. Several protection measures are discussed. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/kmae/2011071Cottus haemusidistributionabundancesizeconservation measures
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Petrova Uzunova E.
spellingShingle Petrova Uzunova E.
Assessment of the conservation status of endemic sculpin Cottus haemusi (Cottidae) in the river Vit (Danube Tributary), northwest Bulgaria
Knowledge and Management of Aquatic Ecosystems
Cottus haemusi
distribution
abundance
size
conservation measures
author_facet Petrova Uzunova E.
author_sort Petrova Uzunova E.
title Assessment of the conservation status of endemic sculpin Cottus haemusi (Cottidae) in the river Vit (Danube Tributary), northwest Bulgaria
title_short Assessment of the conservation status of endemic sculpin Cottus haemusi (Cottidae) in the river Vit (Danube Tributary), northwest Bulgaria
title_full Assessment of the conservation status of endemic sculpin Cottus haemusi (Cottidae) in the river Vit (Danube Tributary), northwest Bulgaria
title_fullStr Assessment of the conservation status of endemic sculpin Cottus haemusi (Cottidae) in the river Vit (Danube Tributary), northwest Bulgaria
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of the conservation status of endemic sculpin Cottus haemusi (Cottidae) in the river Vit (Danube Tributary), northwest Bulgaria
title_sort assessment of the conservation status of endemic sculpin cottus haemusi (cottidae) in the river vit (danube tributary), northwest bulgaria
publisher EDP Sciences
series Knowledge and Management of Aquatic Ecosystems
issn 1961-9502
publishDate 2011-11-01
description Cottus haemusi (Marinov and Dikov, 1986. Acta Zool. Bulg. 3, 18–23) is an endemic fish species that is restricted to the upper tributaries of the river Vit, Northwest Bulgaria. After its discovery in 1986, no further investigation of the C. haemusi population has been conducted. The aims of the present study were to determine its current population status based on the distribution, abundance and size structure of the C. haemusi population and to analyse the main environmental parameters of its habitat. Five upland tributaries and the main river were examined in low-water periods in 2009 and 2010. Two-pass electrofishing surveys were performed at 14 sites to estimate species presence, abundance and size distribution. C. haemusi was only detected in two tributaries of the river Vit: Kostina and Toplja. The current investigation failed to find the species at previously recorded sites. The total distribution area of this species is estimated to be 16 200 m2. The observed abundance of the Vit sculpin ranged from 5.6 to 8.4 individuals·100 m–2, with a mean of 7.0 individuals·100 m–2. Investigation of the size structure revealed the relatively low contribution of one-summer-old individuals. Microhabitat preferences did not differ significantly from other European cottidae species. Only a higher percentage of cobbles distinguished sites with sculpins from those without. The restricted distribution and loss of the bullhead population from some localities in the river Vit could be explained by human disturbance and the deterioration of natural habitat. Several protection measures are discussed.
topic Cottus haemusi
distribution
abundance
size
conservation measures
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/kmae/2011071
work_keys_str_mv AT petrovauzunovae assessmentoftheconservationstatusofendemicsculpincottushaemusicottidaeintherivervitdanubetributarynorthwestbulgaria
_version_ 1725391003992457216