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Functional role of fish in tropical freshwaters

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Title: Functional role of fish in tropical freshwaters


1
Functional role of fish in tropical freshwaters
  • Phytoplankton consuming fish are common in the
    tropics
  • As such, fish do not only consume zooplankton,
    they also compete with them for phytoplankton
  • Result
  • Zooplankton show adaptations to minimize
    exploitation by fish (small body size, spines)
  • Phytoplankton show adaptations to minimize
    exploitation by fish (toxic strains, gelatinous
    sheaths)

2
Temperate lakes
Tropical lakes
Source Nilssen 1984
3
Why are fish so abundant in tropical freshwaters?
  • Higher primary production and thus more energy
    available to support higher trophic levels.
  • The fish-algae link in the food chain avoids the
    intermediate trophic level (e.g., zooplankton)
    and thus more efficient energy transfer.

4
The role of fish in material cycling in tropical
flood plains
Source Horne and Goldman, 1994
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6
Fish diversity in tropical rivers
Amazon
Mekong
Mississippi
Source Horne and Goldman, 1994
7
Why are fish (and other higher organisms) so
diverse intropical freshwaters?
  • Productivity-stability hypothesis
  • Structural hypothesis
  • Competition-predation hypothesis
  • Stability-time hypothesis
  • Productivity-disturbance hypothesis

8
Competitive exclusion
Extinction
9
Some common tropical fish families
  • Southern Asia Cyprinidae (minnows) and Siluridae
    (catfishes)
  • Africa Cyprinidae, Siluridae, Characidea (incl.
    piranhas, tetras), and Cichlidae.
  • Tropical South/Central America Characidea,
    Siluridae, Cichlidae.

10
Cyprinidae Minnow family
  • Large, very diverse family
  • Usually 8-9 rays in single dorsal fin
  • Absent from South America/Australia
  • Lack teeth in mouth
  • Cycloid scales on body

11
Siluridae catfish family
  • Whiskers (barbels) around the mouth
  • No scales
  • Stout spines at the dorsal and pectoral fin
    origins
  • Adipose fin
  • Broad, flat head
  • Cosmopolitan

12
Tetras
Characidae
  • Closely related to minnows
  • Adipose fin
  • Teeth
  • Often brightly colored,
  • popular aquarium fishes
  • Central/South America, Africa

Piranhas
13
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14
Some Amazonian highlights.
Red piranha
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Cichlidae Haplochromine cichlids
  • Africa, Central and South America,
  • some in Asia
  • Very diverse
  • Broken lateral line
  • Often brightly colored,
  • popular aquarium fishes
  • Introduced in the U.S.

17
Cichla ocellaris
18
Size of Costa Rica 51,100 km2, or less than half
the size of Ohio (116,096 km2)
19
Freshwater fishes of Costa Rica.
  • Diversity
  • 135 species of fishes (freshwater only) compared
    with some 160 species of fish in Ohio.
  • 19 endemics
  • Central America has more than 350 species of fish
    (especially rich in poeciliids and cichlids).
  • Major threats
  • habitat destruction
  • application of agrochemicals
  • mining of large rivers for sand and gravel
  • pollution (sewage, pulp waste from coffee
    plantations, industrial waste, and sediment
    erosion
  • exotic introductions (Tilapia, trout and guppy)
  • Paleogeography
  • Species dispersal between South and North America
    was facilitated when an intercontinental land
    bridge existed some 65-55 million years B.P.
  • This land bridge disappeared later and was
    reformed during the Pliocene (5 million years
    B.P.) and persists today. Dispersal of fishes
    occurred primarily from the South to the North.
  • In addition to dispersal, vicariance was
    important in producing the present-day diversity.
  • Biotopes
  • High precipitation, many rivers, but few large
    lakes.
  • The largest, Lago Arenal, created by damming the
    Arenal River to create a hydroelectric reservoir.

Source Bussing, W.A. 2002.
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22
Schiemer, Fritz. 1996. Significance of
filter-feeding fish in tropical freshwaters.
Perspectives in Tropical Limnology.SPB Academic
Publishing, Amsterdam, The Netherlands 65-76.
  • Top-down food chain effects seem more significant
    in the tropics than in temperate zone.
  • water birds affecting fish and mollusks
    zooplanktivorous fish impact on zooplankton
  • Cascade on phytoplankton community less clear but
    phyto-planktivorous fish (many cyprinids and
    cichlids) seem important.
  • The role of phytoplanktivorous fish in the
    temperate zone is insignificant.
  • Increased phytoplanktivorous fish
  • increased small algae
  • increased productivity of algae
  • increased microbial activity
  • All these effects are largely determined by the
    ability of the fish to disrupt and digest the
    consumed particles!

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24
Some excretion of viable algal cells
Excretion of DOM/nutrients
25
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