Shifts in species traits among North American freshwater fish assemblages: ecological homogenization?
"Proportion Manifesto": This composition portrays Leonardo Da Vinci's Vitruvian Man over a nautilus shell pattern
PDF

Keywords

Freshwater fish
Biological invasion
Extinction
Extirpation
Species
Species traits
Ecological traits
Biotic homogenization

How to Cite

Elvidge, C., & Ricciardi, A. (2007). Shifts in species traits among North American freshwater fish assemblages: ecological homogenization?. McGill Science Undergraduate Research Journal, 2(1), 24–27. https://doi.org/10.26443/msurj.v2i1.137

Abstract

This study examines whether the processes of species invasion and extirpation have produced distinct shifts in mean species traits of North American freshwater fish assemblages. An analysis of 54 species (29 invaders, 25 extirpated taxa) in 7 drainages revealed significant differences in maximum length, native latitudinal range size, habitat specificity, and migratory behaviour. Results suggest a pattern in which extirpated species are being replaced by larger, more environmentally tolerant species capable of occupying a broader range of habitats. Freshwater fish assemblages containing introduced generalist species may have a selective advantage over pristine communities as human-dominated landscapes continue to replace natural systems.

https://doi.org/10.26443/msurj.v2i1.137
PDF

© The Authors

All rights reserved

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.