Qualitative and quantitative changes in the ichtyofauna of the danubian reservoirs after the construction of the iron gates hydropower plant dams

Human society reaps immense benefits from rivers and in the course of the last century man has considerably altered rivers, using them as waterways, for irrigation, energy production, water intakes, commercial and recreational fisheries, etc. As a consequence of anthropogenic effects, degradation of...

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Main Authors: Lenhardt, Mirjana, Đikanović, Vesna, Hegediš, Aleksandar, Višnjić Jeftić, Željka, Skorić, Stefan, Smederevac-Lalić, Marija
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: Serbian Acad Sciences Arts, Belgrade 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1128
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_10626
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spelling ftunivbelgradimr:oai:rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs:123456789/1128 2024-01-21T10:05:00+01:00 Qualitative and quantitative changes in the ichtyofauna of the danubian reservoirs after the construction of the iron gates hydropower plant dams Kvalitativno-kvantitativne promene ihtiofaune u protočnim dunavskim akumulacijama posle izgradnje brana đerdapskih hidrolelektrana Lenhardt, Mirjana Đikanović, Vesna Hegediš, Aleksandar Višnjić Jeftić, Željka Skorić, Stefan Smederevac-Lalić, Marija 2018 http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1128 https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_10626 unknown Serbian Acad Sciences Arts, Belgrade 978-86-7025-777-1 1452-7375 http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1128 https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_10626 000485068200005 restrictedAccess ARR Ecological and Economic Significance of Fauna of Serbia Danube human impact ichthyology management pollution conferenceObject publishedVersion 2018 ftunivbelgradimr 2023-12-26T17:22:01Z Human society reaps immense benefits from rivers and in the course of the last century man has considerably altered rivers, using them as waterways, for irrigation, energy production, water intakes, commercial and recreational fisheries, etc. As a consequence of anthropogenic effects, degradation of river courses has occurred and there is great need for preserving and restoring their physical, chemical and biological integrity. The Danube is an international river that connects 17 countries and has been under anthropogenic influence since ancient times. Intensive exploitation of fish in the early Holocene led to human settlements remaining for longer periods along the Danube. Numerous Neolithic archaeological sites demonstrate that fishing was the main economic activity of humans on the Danube. Alterations to the river's course in order to secure navigation through the Djerdap gorge were conducted already in the late 19th century, while significant changes in this part of the Danube occurred after the construction of the Iron Gate I and Iron Gate II dams, in 1970 and 1984, at Danube rkm 943 or rkm 863, respectively. This led to interruption of the Danube's longitudinal continuity and to the curtailment of migration routes of anadromous fish species that migrate from the Black Sea up the Danube for spawning. In the past, the beluga sturgeon (Huso huso) migrated all the way to Straubingin Germany (rkm 2327), and the Black Sea shad (Alosa immaculata) went as far as Budapest (rkm 1650). Overfishing and illegal fishing of sturgeon species for their highly prized caviar, water and sediment pollution, and physical alteration to the bottom and banks of the Danube, as well as the restriction of migration due to dam construction led to a significant decrease in population sizes of sturgeons and shads, which now have only 17.4 kilometers for spawning in the Serbian part of the Danube. At the same time, there was the introduction of non-native (allochthonous) fish species for aquaculture, which later became permanent ... Conference Object Beluga Beluga* RIMSI - Repository of Institute for Multidisciplinary Research (University of Belgrade)
institution Open Polar
collection RIMSI - Repository of Institute for Multidisciplinary Research (University of Belgrade)
op_collection_id ftunivbelgradimr
language unknown
topic Danube
human impact
ichthyology
management
pollution
spellingShingle Danube
human impact
ichthyology
management
pollution
Lenhardt, Mirjana
Đikanović, Vesna
Hegediš, Aleksandar
Višnjić Jeftić, Željka
Skorić, Stefan
Smederevac-Lalić, Marija
Qualitative and quantitative changes in the ichtyofauna of the danubian reservoirs after the construction of the iron gates hydropower plant dams
topic_facet Danube
human impact
ichthyology
management
pollution
description Human society reaps immense benefits from rivers and in the course of the last century man has considerably altered rivers, using them as waterways, for irrigation, energy production, water intakes, commercial and recreational fisheries, etc. As a consequence of anthropogenic effects, degradation of river courses has occurred and there is great need for preserving and restoring their physical, chemical and biological integrity. The Danube is an international river that connects 17 countries and has been under anthropogenic influence since ancient times. Intensive exploitation of fish in the early Holocene led to human settlements remaining for longer periods along the Danube. Numerous Neolithic archaeological sites demonstrate that fishing was the main economic activity of humans on the Danube. Alterations to the river's course in order to secure navigation through the Djerdap gorge were conducted already in the late 19th century, while significant changes in this part of the Danube occurred after the construction of the Iron Gate I and Iron Gate II dams, in 1970 and 1984, at Danube rkm 943 or rkm 863, respectively. This led to interruption of the Danube's longitudinal continuity and to the curtailment of migration routes of anadromous fish species that migrate from the Black Sea up the Danube for spawning. In the past, the beluga sturgeon (Huso huso) migrated all the way to Straubingin Germany (rkm 2327), and the Black Sea shad (Alosa immaculata) went as far as Budapest (rkm 1650). Overfishing and illegal fishing of sturgeon species for their highly prized caviar, water and sediment pollution, and physical alteration to the bottom and banks of the Danube, as well as the restriction of migration due to dam construction led to a significant decrease in population sizes of sturgeons and shads, which now have only 17.4 kilometers for spawning in the Serbian part of the Danube. At the same time, there was the introduction of non-native (allochthonous) fish species for aquaculture, which later became permanent ...
format Conference Object
author Lenhardt, Mirjana
Đikanović, Vesna
Hegediš, Aleksandar
Višnjić Jeftić, Željka
Skorić, Stefan
Smederevac-Lalić, Marija
author_facet Lenhardt, Mirjana
Đikanović, Vesna
Hegediš, Aleksandar
Višnjić Jeftić, Željka
Skorić, Stefan
Smederevac-Lalić, Marija
author_sort Lenhardt, Mirjana
title Qualitative and quantitative changes in the ichtyofauna of the danubian reservoirs after the construction of the iron gates hydropower plant dams
title_short Qualitative and quantitative changes in the ichtyofauna of the danubian reservoirs after the construction of the iron gates hydropower plant dams
title_full Qualitative and quantitative changes in the ichtyofauna of the danubian reservoirs after the construction of the iron gates hydropower plant dams
title_fullStr Qualitative and quantitative changes in the ichtyofauna of the danubian reservoirs after the construction of the iron gates hydropower plant dams
title_full_unstemmed Qualitative and quantitative changes in the ichtyofauna of the danubian reservoirs after the construction of the iron gates hydropower plant dams
title_sort qualitative and quantitative changes in the ichtyofauna of the danubian reservoirs after the construction of the iron gates hydropower plant dams
publisher Serbian Acad Sciences Arts, Belgrade
publishDate 2018
url http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1128
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_10626
genre Beluga
Beluga*
genre_facet Beluga
Beluga*
op_source Ecological and Economic Significance of Fauna of Serbia
op_relation 978-86-7025-777-1
1452-7375
http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1128
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_10626
000485068200005
op_rights restrictedAccess
ARR
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