Historical evolution of fish biodiversity and capture periodicity in the River Meuse (Belgium) as revealed by 15 consecutive years of fishpass monitoring

In the River Meuse at 323km upstream from the North Sea, the hydroelectric dam of Lixhe (rated power of 5300KW) is equipped with two fishpasses: one pool and weir fishpass (in operation since 1980; 0.13m³.s-1 operating flow) and one vertical slot fishpass (in operation since 1998; 1m3.s-1 operating...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Benitez, Jean-Philippe, Dierckx, Arnaud, Nzau Matondo, Billy, Ovidio, Michaël
Other Authors: AFFISH-RC - Applied and Fundamental FISH Research Center - ULiège
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/184994
id ftorbi:oai:orbi.ulg.ac.be:2268/184994
record_format openpolar
spelling ftorbi:oai:orbi.ulg.ac.be:2268/184994 2024-11-10T14:35:40+00:00 Historical evolution of fish biodiversity and capture periodicity in the River Meuse (Belgium) as revealed by 15 consecutive years of fishpass monitoring Benitez, Jean-Philippe Dierckx, Arnaud Nzau Matondo, Billy Ovidio, Michaël AFFISH-RC - Applied and Fundamental FISH Research Center - ULiège 2015-06 https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/184994 en eng https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/184994 info:hdl:2268/184994 Fish Passage 2015. International conference on river connectivity best practices and innovations, Groningen, Netherlands [NL], 22-24 June 2015 Fish-pass long-term monitoring biodiversity upstream migration Meuse Belgium Life sciences Environmental sciences & ecology Sciences du vivant Sciences de l’environnement & écologie conference paper not in proceedings http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_18cp info:eu-repo/semantics/conferencePaper 2015 ftorbi 2024-10-21T15:24:55Z In the River Meuse at 323km upstream from the North Sea, the hydroelectric dam of Lixhe (rated power of 5300KW) is equipped with two fishpasses: one pool and weir fishpass (in operation since 1980; 0.13m³.s-1 operating flow) and one vertical slot fishpass (in operation since 1998; 1m3.s-1 operating flow). Both fishpasses were scientifically monitored using capture traps during 15 consecutive years (from 1999 to 2014). The objective of the study is to analyse i) the evolution of fish stock and biodiversity over 15 years and ii) the capture periodicity of fish and it’s variation over years. During the considered period, we observed 36 species at adult stage (88597 individuals with 75% of cyprinids) and 13 species at juvenile (0+) stage (335067 individuals with 90% of cyprinids). Global results between 1999 and 2014 showed a drastic reduction in capture per year (>90%) for some species like Anguilla Anguilla, Alburnus alburnus, Blicca bjoerkna, Rutilus rutilus and Tinca tinca. Whereas other species have emerged like Aspius aspius and Silurus glanis. For the 0+, an important interannual variation is observed from few individuals to several tens of thousands per year. The comparison between both fishpasses indicated a greater use (>50%) of the vertical slot fishpass by rheophilic species and species that have good swimming ability. The analysis of capture periodicity for the most abundant species at adult stage demonstrated the presence of stable behaviours between years for the Abramis abrama and B. bjoerkna respectively a Q50 of the capture day of the year from 108th to 144th day at mean=17°C and from 118th to 155th day at mean=18°C. In contrast other species have patterns more variables (Barbus barbus: Q50 from 96th to 266th day; R. rutilus: from 10th and 309th day). Finally the 0+ exhibited a capture periodicity stable in time during the summer. Conference Object Anguilla anguilla University of Liège: ORBi (Open Repository and Bibliography) Weir ENVELOPE(177.167,177.167,-84.983,-84.983)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Liège: ORBi (Open Repository and Bibliography)
op_collection_id ftorbi
language English
topic Fish-pass
long-term monitoring
biodiversity
upstream migration
Meuse
Belgium
Life sciences
Environmental sciences & ecology
Sciences du vivant
Sciences de l’environnement & écologie
spellingShingle Fish-pass
long-term monitoring
biodiversity
upstream migration
Meuse
Belgium
Life sciences
Environmental sciences & ecology
Sciences du vivant
Sciences de l’environnement & écologie
Benitez, Jean-Philippe
Dierckx, Arnaud
Nzau Matondo, Billy
Ovidio, Michaël
Historical evolution of fish biodiversity and capture periodicity in the River Meuse (Belgium) as revealed by 15 consecutive years of fishpass monitoring
topic_facet Fish-pass
long-term monitoring
biodiversity
upstream migration
Meuse
Belgium
Life sciences
Environmental sciences & ecology
Sciences du vivant
Sciences de l’environnement & écologie
description In the River Meuse at 323km upstream from the North Sea, the hydroelectric dam of Lixhe (rated power of 5300KW) is equipped with two fishpasses: one pool and weir fishpass (in operation since 1980; 0.13m³.s-1 operating flow) and one vertical slot fishpass (in operation since 1998; 1m3.s-1 operating flow). Both fishpasses were scientifically monitored using capture traps during 15 consecutive years (from 1999 to 2014). The objective of the study is to analyse i) the evolution of fish stock and biodiversity over 15 years and ii) the capture periodicity of fish and it’s variation over years. During the considered period, we observed 36 species at adult stage (88597 individuals with 75% of cyprinids) and 13 species at juvenile (0+) stage (335067 individuals with 90% of cyprinids). Global results between 1999 and 2014 showed a drastic reduction in capture per year (>90%) for some species like Anguilla Anguilla, Alburnus alburnus, Blicca bjoerkna, Rutilus rutilus and Tinca tinca. Whereas other species have emerged like Aspius aspius and Silurus glanis. For the 0+, an important interannual variation is observed from few individuals to several tens of thousands per year. The comparison between both fishpasses indicated a greater use (>50%) of the vertical slot fishpass by rheophilic species and species that have good swimming ability. The analysis of capture periodicity for the most abundant species at adult stage demonstrated the presence of stable behaviours between years for the Abramis abrama and B. bjoerkna respectively a Q50 of the capture day of the year from 108th to 144th day at mean=17°C and from 118th to 155th day at mean=18°C. In contrast other species have patterns more variables (Barbus barbus: Q50 from 96th to 266th day; R. rutilus: from 10th and 309th day). Finally the 0+ exhibited a capture periodicity stable in time during the summer.
author2 AFFISH-RC - Applied and Fundamental FISH Research Center - ULiège
format Conference Object
author Benitez, Jean-Philippe
Dierckx, Arnaud
Nzau Matondo, Billy
Ovidio, Michaël
author_facet Benitez, Jean-Philippe
Dierckx, Arnaud
Nzau Matondo, Billy
Ovidio, Michaël
author_sort Benitez, Jean-Philippe
title Historical evolution of fish biodiversity and capture periodicity in the River Meuse (Belgium) as revealed by 15 consecutive years of fishpass monitoring
title_short Historical evolution of fish biodiversity and capture periodicity in the River Meuse (Belgium) as revealed by 15 consecutive years of fishpass monitoring
title_full Historical evolution of fish biodiversity and capture periodicity in the River Meuse (Belgium) as revealed by 15 consecutive years of fishpass monitoring
title_fullStr Historical evolution of fish biodiversity and capture periodicity in the River Meuse (Belgium) as revealed by 15 consecutive years of fishpass monitoring
title_full_unstemmed Historical evolution of fish biodiversity and capture periodicity in the River Meuse (Belgium) as revealed by 15 consecutive years of fishpass monitoring
title_sort historical evolution of fish biodiversity and capture periodicity in the river meuse (belgium) as revealed by 15 consecutive years of fishpass monitoring
publishDate 2015
url https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/184994
long_lat ENVELOPE(177.167,177.167,-84.983,-84.983)
geographic Weir
geographic_facet Weir
genre Anguilla anguilla
genre_facet Anguilla anguilla
op_source Fish Passage 2015. International conference on river connectivity best practices and innovations, Groningen, Netherlands [NL], 22-24 June 2015
op_relation https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/184994
info:hdl:2268/184994
_version_ 1815350548901134336