Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/61785
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Type: Journal article
Title: Ecological responses to variable water regimes in arid-zone wetlands: Coongie Lakes, Australia
Author: Puckridge, James Terence
Costelloe, Justin Francis
Reid, Julian Robert Wishart
Citation: Marine and Freshwater Research, 2010; 61(8):832-841
Publisher: C S I R O Publishing
Issue Date: 2010
ISSN: 1323-1650
School/Discipline: School of Earth and Environmental Sciences
Statement of
Responsibility: 
J. T. Puckridge, J. F. Costelloe and J. R. W. Reid
Abstract: In dryland rivers, interactions between flow variability and complex geomorphology expose floodplain wetlands to long-term patterns of flooding and drying and highly variable short-term events. We consider whether the abundance and diversity of fish, macroinvertebrate and zooplankton communities in wetlands of the Coongie Lakes complex are influenced by long-term water regimes. To relate biological changes to changes in water regime, mean values of assemblage indices were ranked and correlated against ranked frequency of drying (i.e. water retention) in each waterbody. As water-retention time increased, fish species diversity (richness, evenness) and disease incidence rose, and fish species dominance and macroinvertebrate abundance decreased. The more mobile species of fish utilised the habitats and food resources provided by newly flooded waterbodies. We conclude that fish populations utilise wetlands with a variety of water regimes, and reductions in the frequency of inundation will decrease fish diversity with sequential losses of less mobile species.
Keywords: Coongie Lakes; Cooper Creek; disease; diversity; dryland rivers; fish; flow-ecology correlations; flow regime; macroinvertebrates; Ramsar; variability; zooplankton.
Rights: © CSIRO 2010
DOI: 10.1071/MF09069
Appears in Collections:Earth and Environmental Sciences publications

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