Fish assemblages and diversity in three tributaries of the Irrawaddy River in China: changes, threats and conservation perspectives
Incompletely known fish assemblages and species diversity are substantial obstacles in
fish conservation, particularly when their aquatic habitats are under threat due to rapid
human-induced changes. Fish assemblages and diversity in three tributaries of the upper
Irrawaddy River in China (the Dulong, Daying and Ruili rivers) were examined based on
field collections and literature resources. The newly compiled fish assemblage recorded 85
species (in 8 orders, 20 families and 51 genera) distributed in the upper Irrawaddy. The
fish compositions in the Daying (67 species, 44 genera, 19 families, 7 orders) and Ruili
rivers (65 species, 44 genera, 19 families, 8 orders) were more similar to each other and
more speciose than that in the Dulong River (14 species, 10 genera, 4 families, 3 orders).
Two indices of taxonomic diversity (the average taxonomic distinctness (Δ+), and the
variation in taxonomic distinctness (Λ+)) were used to discriminate four
collections spanning a ten-year period. A decrease in taxonomic diversity and an increase
in unevenness of the fish assemblages were found in both the Daying River and Ruili
rivers, which indicated that the impacts were accumulated gradually during this decade,
when dams and the spread of non-native species were major threats. Comparatively speaking,
the Dulong River is still in a near-natural state, and thus the fish community has
experienced less disturbance. In situ conservation (nature reserves and
tributary protection) and ex situ conservation (artificial propagation
and release) should be combined and managed to promote fish conservation in the future.
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