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Browsing by Autor "M Stassen"

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    Population dynamics of the migratory fish Prochilodus lineatus in a neotropical river: the relationships with river discharge, flood pulse, El Niño and fluvial megafan behaviour
    (Sociedade Brasileira de Ictiologia, 2010) M Stassen; Max W. P. M. van de Ven; Tjisse van der Heide; Marco Antonio Guerrero Hiza; G. van der Velde; Alfons J. P. Smolders
    The relative importance of flood pulse dynamics and megafan behaviour for the Sábalo (Prochilodus lineatus) catches in the neotropical Pilcomayo River is studied. The Sábalo catches can mainly be explained by decreased river discharges in the preceding years resulting in smaller inundated areas during rainy season floods and thereby in a decreased area of feeding grounds for the fishes. The decreased river discharges and the related decline of Sábalo catches in the 1990's can be linked to the 90-95 El Niño event. In 2007 the Sábalo catches were comparable to the catches before the "El Niño" event. The connectivity (continuity) between the main river and flood plain areas, which is influenced by sedimentation processes, is also of great importance and very probably plays a more important role since the late 1990's.
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    Suspended sediment causes annual acute fish mortality in the Pilcomayo River (Bolivia)
    (Wiley, 2012) L. H. Swinkels; Max W. P. M. van de Ven; M Stassen; G. van der Velde; H.J.R. Lenders; Alfons J. P. Smolders
    Abstract Fish mortality in the middle reaches of the Pilcomayo River (Bolivia), locally called ‘borrachera’, can be observed almost every year at the onset of the rainy season. In order to study the potential causes of the ‘borrachera’, suspended sediment (SS) and selected water quality parameters have been monitored from mid‐September until mid‐December 2010. Gill samples were taken and analysed, before and during the ‘borrachera’ event on December 7 th 2010. Data on river discharge were obtained from a database. During the sampling period, the river hydrology changed dramatically. At the day of the ‘borrachera’, heavy rains in upstream reaches of the river catchment changed the river from a quiet stream into a turbulent river with extremely high concentrations of SS (> 100 g l −1 ). This may be caused by the inundation of the entire riverbed, which causes easily erodible material, left on the riverbanks at the end of the former rainy season, to be transported by the river during the first peak discharges. As concentrations of heavy metals in filtered water samples did not show higher values during the ‘borrachera’, it is concluded that the ‘borrachera’ is unlikely to be caused by heavy metal toxicity. Results showed a strong association between the SS concentration and the ‘borrachera’. Gills of fish collected during the ‘borrachera’ were clogged with sediment to such an extent that oxygen uptake became virtually impossible. High SS concentrations are therefore considered to be the cause of this typical fish mortality phenomenon. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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