Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.5/20419
Title: Longitudinal river zonation in the tropics: examples of fish and caddisflies from endorheic Awash river, Ethiopia
Author: Englmaier, Gernot K.
Hayes, Daniel S.
Meulenbroek, Paul
Terefe, Yonas
Lakew, Aschalew
Tesfaye, Genanaw
Waidbacher, Herwig
Malicky, Hans
Wubie, Alemayehu
Leitner, Patrick
Graf, Wolfram
Keywords: Africa
biodiversity
biogeography
species assemblages
freshwater ecoregions
indicator species
Issue Date: 2020
Publisher: Springer
Citation: Englmaier, G.K., Hayes, D.S., Meulenbroek, P. et al. Longitudinal river zonation in the tropics: examples of fish and caddisflies from the endorheic Awash River, Ethiopia. Hydrobiologia (2020)
Abstract: Specific concepts of fluvial ecology are well studied in riverine ecosystems of the temperate zone but poorly investigated in the Afrotropical region. Hence, we examined the longitudinal zonation of fish and adult caddisfly (Trichoptera) assemblages in the endorheic Awash River (1,250 km in length), Ethiopia. We expected that species assemblages are structured along environmental gradients, reflecting the pattern of large-scale freshwater ecoregions. We applied multivariate statistical methods to test for differences in spatial species assemblage structure and identified characteristic taxa of the observed biocoenoses by indicator species analyses. Fish and caddisfly assemblages were clustered into highland and lowland communities, following the freshwater ecoregions, but separated by an ecotone with highest biodiversity. Moreover, the caddisfly results suggest separating the heterogeneous highlands into a forested and a deforested zone. Surprisingly, the Awash drainage is rather species-poor: only 11 fish (1 endemic, 2 introduced) and 28 caddisfly species (8 new records for Ethiopia) were recorded from the mainstem and its major tributaries. Nevertheless, specialized species characterize the highland forests, whereas the lowlands primarily host geographically widely distributed species. This study showed that a combined approach of fish and caddisflies is a suitable method for assessing regional characteristics of fluvial ecosystems in the tropics
Description: Primary Research Paper
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.5/20419
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10750-020-04400-0
Appears in Collections:CEF - Artigos de Revistas

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