Title: Fish Community Assessment
1Fish Community Assessment of the Peace River
Tom Champeau, FFWCC-DFFM Bill Pouder,
FFWCC-DFFM Jeff Willitzer, FFWCC-DFFM Dave
Blewett, FFWCC-FWRI Phil Stevens, FFWCC-FWRI
2- Peace River Facts
- Flow begins at hypereutrophic
- Lake Hancock.
- 211 km in length.
- Drops 30 m from Central Florida
- Highlands to Charlotte Harbor.
- Average gradient of 0.2 m/km
- Average annual discharge of
- 32.7 m2/s.
- Drainage area is 5,959 km2.
- Upper basin mined for
- phosphate ore since 1900.
- Agricultural development
- throughout the basin.
PEACE RIVER
Photo credit NASA
3Homeland
Wauchula
Gardner
Nocatee
Photo credit NASA
4Map from FDEP, 2006
5(No Transcript)
6Fish as Indicators of Biotic Integrity
- Sensitive to a wide range of environmental
conditions. - Long lived species measure time scale effects.
- Can evaluate ecological interactions over a range
of life history phases. - Possess economic value and stakeholder interest.
7What environmental factors can fish data evaluate?
- Water quality (Lake Hancock effects).
- Hydrological cycles (baseflow, MFLs).
- Structural habitat (woody debris, snags).
- Extreme events (hurricanes, droughts).
- Impact of invasive exotic fishes.
- Ecological role of marine species.
8Common snook (Centropomis undecimalis) are a
marine predator found in the Peace River
throughout the year.
9Relative abundance ( of fish/minute of
electrofishing) of common snook (Centropomis
undecimalis) in Peace River, 2004 2006. (From
Blewett et al. 2006)
10Blue tilapia, Oreochromis aureaThought to have
invaded Peace River 1963 - 68.
11Walking catfish, Clarias batrachusThought to
have invaded Peace River 1973 -77Â Â
Photo credit USGS
12Vermiculated Sailfin Armored Catfish,
Pterygoplichthys disjunctivus Orinoco Sailfin
Armored Catfish, Pterygoplichthys
multiradiutusFirst documented in Peace River in
1992
Photo credit USGS
13- Brown Hoplo, Hoplosternum littorale
- First documented in Peace River in 2005
Photo credit USGS
14African jewelfish, Hemichromis letourneuxi First
documented in Peace River in 2005
Photo credit USGS
15Oriental weatherloach, Misgurnus
anguillicaudatusFirst documented in Peace River
bass stomach in 2008
Photo credit USGS
16Methods
- Used boat electrofishing.
- Mostly at night, some day.
- Four stations were selected.
- Clustered replicates of three
- ten-minute samples.
- Time measured as the total
- amount of time electricity is
- applied to the water.
- Fish were measured in total
- length, weighted, and released.
- Followed standardized protocol
- developed by Bass (1990) .
17Fish Community Metrics
- Relative abundance of fish/minute
- Relative biomass kg of fish/minute
- Percent abundance of exotic species
- Percent biomass of exotic species
- Species richness
- Shannon diversity
- Comparisons used Kruskal-Wallis/ANOVA at P lt 0.05
18Structural Riverine Habitat
Exposed roots
Woody debris and snags
Steep sand banks
Gentle banks
19Locations of Peace River fish community fish
sampling stations
Homeland
Wauchula
- Nocatee is influenced by
- tides but is freshwater.
- Narrow conductivity range.
- Sampling done during fall
- or winter within a narrow
- range of water levels to
- reduce sampling error.
- Sampled every year from
- 1983 to 1992.
- No sampling 1993 2003.
- Repeated protocol in 2005
- and 2006.
Gardner
Nocatee
20Objectives
- Update fish community database.
- Compare with historic data 1983 1992.
- Document number and composition of exotic fish
species. - Evaluate effects of 2004 hurricanes and prolonged
hypoxia event (Stevens et al. 2006 Tomasko et
al. 2006).
21Hurricane Charley - August 13, 2004
Photo credit National Weather Service
2217.2 feet on 08 Sept
Duration of hypoxia (lt2.0 mg/l from Tomasko et
al. 2006)
Francis
Jeanne
11 feet Flood Stage
Charley
Flow data from USGS
23If hypoxic flooding reduced native fish
abundance, will exotics adapted for such
conditions dominate?
Photo credit NASA
24Relative abundance (median number of fish
collected per minute of electrofishing) of native
and exotic fish for all Peace River
stations,1983-2006.
25Comparison of mean exotic and native fish
abundance with standard errors for historic
period (1983-1992) and recent years (2005 and
2006).
2005 vs 2006 Exotic P0.002
Total P0.04 Exotic P0.04
Total P0.01
26Relative biomass (median kg of fish collected per
minute of electrofishing) of native and exotic
fish for all Peace River stations,1983-2006.
27Comparison of mean exotic and native fish biomass
with standard errors for historic period
(1983-1992) and recent years (2005 and 2006).
2005 vs 2006 Total P0.018
Total P0.0002 Exotic P0.001
Exotic P0.01
28Median species richness and Shannon diversity for
all Peace River stations,1983-2006.
29Comparison of mean species richness and diversity
with standard errors for historic period
(1983-1992) and recent years (2005 and 2006).
30Species Composition - AbundanceTop five species
mean percent composition and (SE)
31Species Composition Comparison(Two-dimensional
nonmetric scaling ordination and similarity
percentages analysis)
32Species Composition by Year (Two-dimensional
nonmetric scaling ordination and similarity
percentages analysis)
33Results Summary
- Abundance higher than historic mean in 2005 and
2006. - Five new exotics since 1990.
- Exotic abundance higher in 2006.
- Biomass higher than historic mean in 2006.
- Exotic biomass higher in 2005 and 2006.
- Richness and diversity not significantly
different from historic means.
34Results Summary
- No native extirpations documented.
- During Spring 2005, 32 species collected but
community was dominated by Gambusia holbrooki
(49). - By 2006, abundance composition for many species
similar to historic levels, except
Pterygoplichthys sp. that were most abundant
(21). - Hurricane effects?? Do not know what fish
community was in 2004. Floods followed by
extended drought.
35How can fish community data help support future
river/watershed management?
- Exotic fish evaluations, changes in community
structure. - Biotic integrity of Horse Creek and Charlie
Creek. - Lake Hancock discharge to support base flow in
upper river. - Long-term data to evaluate MFL (State Wildlife
Grant/SWFWMD funding 2007 2010). - Fish community response to flood and drought.
- Status of sport fishery.
- Ecological role of snook and their habitat
requirements/preferences. - Provide information about fish community to
stakeholders and decision-makers.
36Literature Cited
- Bass, D. G., Jr. 1990. Monitoring Floridas
riverine fish communities. Florida Scientist,
53(1) 1-10. - Blewett, D., P. W. Stevens, T. R. Champeau, and
R. G. Taylor. 2006. Abundance of common snook,
Centropomus undecimalis, in three southwest
Florida rivers Implications for overwintering.
Florida Wildlife Research Institute, Florida Fish
and Wildlife Conservation Commission. Port
Charlotte, Florida. - Stevens, P. W., D. A. Blewett, and J. P. Casey.
2006. Short-term effects of a low dissolved
oxygen event of estuarine fish assemblages
following the passage of Hurricane Charley.
Estuaries and Coasts, 29(6a) 997-1003. - Tomasko, D. A., C. Anastasiou, and C. Kovach.
2006. Dissolved oxygen dynamics in Charlotte
Harbor and its contributing watershed, in
response to Hurricanes Charley, Frances, and
Jeanne-impacts and recovery. Estuaries and Coasts
29(6a) 932 938.