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Complex River Networks Better Support Stable Watershed Populations

June 14, 2018 |

This article was originally published on Phys.org


How are populations of living organisms maintained in changing environments? This ecological question is even more imperative as many species are increasingly threatened by climate change and human influences. A new University of Minnesota study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, helps answer this question for riverine organisms.

Life in streams and rivers is highly influenced by downstream flow of water through networks of connected channels, with small streams joining to form larger streams and rivers. Researchers from the University of Minnesota and Hokkaido, Japan, led by Akira Terui, Ph.D., explored how  river systems underpin watershed-scale populations using mathematical models and analyses of 18 years worth of fish  data in Japan. They found that more complex river networks, with greater levels of branching, stabilize watershed populations by providing a physical template that supports diverse habitats and buffers the impact of large-scale environmental fluctuations.

“We discovered watershed populations were more stable when they were situated in more complex river networks,” said Terui. “Network complexity of rivers may act as a natural defense system against environmental uncertainty.”

Among the study’s key findings:

  • mathematical models predict increased branching stabilizes watershed-scale population dynamics when individual streams (i.e., “branches”) in a network provide unique environmental conditions;
  • in support of the model prediction, branching complexity provides stabilizing effects across populations of four ecologically distinct fish species, which include economically valuable species such as masu salmon;
  • loss of network complexity due to human activities may undermine resilience of watershed populations…”

Read on at: Phys.org

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