物种丰富度
河岸带
生物多样性
地理
栖息地
物种均匀度
底栖区
电捕鱼
环境科学
渔业
生态学
生物
作者
Aaron N. Sexton,Jean‐Nicolas Beisel,Cybill Staentzel,Christian Wolter,Évelyne Tales,Jérôme Belliard,A.D. Buijse,Vanesa Martínez‐Fernández,Karl M. Wantzen,Sonja C. Jähnig,Carlos García de Leániz,Astrid Schmidt‐Kloiber,Peter Haase,Marie Anne Eurie Forio,Gaït Archambaud,Jean‐François Fruget,Alain Dohet,Vesela Evtimova,Zoltán Csabai,Mathieu Floury
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41559-024-02414-8
摘要
Inland navigation in Europe is proposed to increase in the coming years, being promoted as a low-carbon form of transport. However, we currently lack knowledge on how this would impact biodiversity at large scales and interact with existing stressors. Here we addressed this knowledge gap by analysing fish and macroinvertebrate community time series across large European rivers comprising 19,592 observations from 4,049 sampling sites spanning the past 32 years. We found ship traffic to be associated with biodiversity declines, that is, loss of fish and macroinvertebrate taxonomic richness, diversity and trait richness. Ship traffic was also associated with increases in taxonomic evenness, which, in concert with richness decreases, was attributed to losses in rare taxa. Ship traffic was especially harmful for benthic taxa and those preferring slow flows. These effects often depended on local land use and riparian degradation. In fish, negative impacts of shipping were highest in urban and agricultural landscapes. Regarding navigation infrastructure, the negative impact of channelization on macroinvertebrates was evident only when riparian degradation was also high. Our results demonstrate the risk of increasing inland navigation on freshwater biodiversity. Integrative waterway management accounting for riparian habitats and landscape characteristics could help to mitigate these impacts.
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