4.6 Article

Effects of Habitat Restoration on Fish Communities in Urban Streams

Journal

WATER
Volume 13, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w13162170

Keywords

urban rivers; urban fish communities; river restoration; River Thames catchment

Funding

  1. Natural Environment Research Council
  2. London DTP [NE/L002485/1]

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The study showed that urban streams face pressures such as geomorphological alterations, hydrological disconnectivity, and water pollution. River restoration projects can increase fish density and biomass, but do not necessarily have a significant impact on community structure.
Geomorphological alterations, hydrological disconnectivity and water pollution are among the dominant pressures affecting ecological integrity in urban streams. River restoration approaches often involve utilising in-stream structures to encourage flow heterogeneity and promote habitat diversity. However, few studies examine the success of such projects. In this study, fish density, biomass and community structure at paired restored and unrestored reaches across five tributaries of the River Thames were examined. Fish density varied among rivers and reaches but was generally higher at restored sites. Restored sites also exhibited higher overall fish biomass, attributed mainly to the presence of brown trout (Salmo trutta L.) at the River Wandle. Despite higher density and biomass values at restored sites, the community structure analysis did not identify strong links between either river or restoration status using either species-specific density or biomass. Our results highlight that although reach-scale restoration can lead to localised increases in species density and biomass, this may chiefly be due to aggregation owing to preferential habitats created through restoration activities at these sites. Over larger spatial scales, significant improvements to species richness and diversity are likely to be limited due to the poor water quality and disconnected nature of these urban streams. Whilst reach-scale restoration clearly has the potential to provide preferential habitats for fish species, future efforts should focus on improving connectivity for fish across the wider Thames basin network by removing barriers to passage, improving water quality, restoring watershed processes and creating well-connected, diverse habitats which can facilitate the survival of a wide array of fish species throughout their life cycle.

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