Fish on the roof of the world: densities, habitats and trophic position of stone loaches (Triplophysa) in Tibetan streams

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Fish on the roof of the world : densities, habitats and trophic position of stone loaches (Triplophysa) in Tibetan streams. / Jacobsen, Dean; Laursen, Søren Kock; Hamerlik, Ladislav; Moltesen, Karen; Michelsen, Anders; Christoffersen, Kirsten Seestern.

In: Marine and Freshwater Research, Vol. 68, No. 1, 2017, p. 53-64.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Jacobsen, D, Laursen, SK, Hamerlik, L, Moltesen, K, Michelsen, A & Christoffersen, KS 2017, 'Fish on the roof of the world: densities, habitats and trophic position of stone loaches (Triplophysa) in Tibetan streams', Marine and Freshwater Research, vol. 68, no. 1, pp. 53-64. https://doi.org/10.1071/MF15225

APA

Jacobsen, D., Laursen, S. K., Hamerlik, L., Moltesen, K., Michelsen, A., & Christoffersen, K. S. (2017). Fish on the roof of the world: densities, habitats and trophic position of stone loaches (Triplophysa) in Tibetan streams. Marine and Freshwater Research, 68(1), 53-64. https://doi.org/10.1071/MF15225

Vancouver

Jacobsen D, Laursen SK, Hamerlik L, Moltesen K, Michelsen A, Christoffersen KS. Fish on the roof of the world: densities, habitats and trophic position of stone loaches (Triplophysa) in Tibetan streams. Marine and Freshwater Research. 2017;68(1):53-64. https://doi.org/10.1071/MF15225

Author

Jacobsen, Dean ; Laursen, Søren Kock ; Hamerlik, Ladislav ; Moltesen, Karen ; Michelsen, Anders ; Christoffersen, Kirsten Seestern. / Fish on the roof of the world : densities, habitats and trophic position of stone loaches (Triplophysa) in Tibetan streams. In: Marine and Freshwater Research. 2017 ; Vol. 68, No. 1. pp. 53-64.

Bibtex

@article{54ad032febf1440ba517e31750abaa38,
title = "Fish on the roof of the world: densities, habitats and trophic position of stone loaches (Triplophysa) in Tibetan streams",
abstract = "The fast increase in temperature on the Tibetan Plateau, with anticipated future changes in aquatic ecosystems and biodiversity, highlights the urgent need for ecological data on the sparsely studied Tibetan running waters. In the present study we surveyed eight Tibetan streams to obtain data on densities, feeding selectivity and trophic position of the stone loach Triplophysa. Benthic algae, detritus, macroinvertebrates and fish were quantified and collected for stable isotope and stomach content analysis. Triplophysa density (mean 0.70 individuals m–2, maximum 1.6 individuals m–2) decreased with altitude and increased with the percentage cover of fine substratum. Glacier-fed sites tended to have the lowest fish densities, whereas the highest densities were found near lakes. Mean fish length (4.1–9.6 cm) was positively related to the percentage cover of coarse substratum. Triplophysa was omnivorous, but the composition of the stomach contents varied greatly between sites and among individuals. Algal matter was ingested at most sites, but macroinvertebrates (Chironomidae, Baetidae and Simuliidae) dominated the ingestion (average 50–100. The trophic position of Triplophysa, identified from δ15N (‰) of the biota, varied between 2.6 and 4.2 among localities (mean 3.6) and was inversely related to the biomass of benthic algae, but unrelated to quantities of other potential food sources.",
keywords = "feeding selectivity, food web, high altitude, omnivory, stable isotope analysis, stream type.",
author = "Dean Jacobsen and Laursen, {S{\o}ren Kock} and Ladislav Hamerlik and Karen Moltesen and Anders Michelsen and Christoffersen, {Kirsten Seestern}",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.1071/MF15225",
language = "English",
volume = "68",
pages = "53--64",
journal = "Marine and Freshwater Research",
issn = "1323-1650",
publisher = "C S I R O Publishing",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Fish on the roof of the world

T2 - densities, habitats and trophic position of stone loaches (Triplophysa) in Tibetan streams

AU - Jacobsen, Dean

AU - Laursen, Søren Kock

AU - Hamerlik, Ladislav

AU - Moltesen, Karen

AU - Michelsen, Anders

AU - Christoffersen, Kirsten Seestern

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - The fast increase in temperature on the Tibetan Plateau, with anticipated future changes in aquatic ecosystems and biodiversity, highlights the urgent need for ecological data on the sparsely studied Tibetan running waters. In the present study we surveyed eight Tibetan streams to obtain data on densities, feeding selectivity and trophic position of the stone loach Triplophysa. Benthic algae, detritus, macroinvertebrates and fish were quantified and collected for stable isotope and stomach content analysis. Triplophysa density (mean 0.70 individuals m–2, maximum 1.6 individuals m–2) decreased with altitude and increased with the percentage cover of fine substratum. Glacier-fed sites tended to have the lowest fish densities, whereas the highest densities were found near lakes. Mean fish length (4.1–9.6 cm) was positively related to the percentage cover of coarse substratum. Triplophysa was omnivorous, but the composition of the stomach contents varied greatly between sites and among individuals. Algal matter was ingested at most sites, but macroinvertebrates (Chironomidae, Baetidae and Simuliidae) dominated the ingestion (average 50–100. The trophic position of Triplophysa, identified from δ15N (‰) of the biota, varied between 2.6 and 4.2 among localities (mean 3.6) and was inversely related to the biomass of benthic algae, but unrelated to quantities of other potential food sources.

AB - The fast increase in temperature on the Tibetan Plateau, with anticipated future changes in aquatic ecosystems and biodiversity, highlights the urgent need for ecological data on the sparsely studied Tibetan running waters. In the present study we surveyed eight Tibetan streams to obtain data on densities, feeding selectivity and trophic position of the stone loach Triplophysa. Benthic algae, detritus, macroinvertebrates and fish were quantified and collected for stable isotope and stomach content analysis. Triplophysa density (mean 0.70 individuals m–2, maximum 1.6 individuals m–2) decreased with altitude and increased with the percentage cover of fine substratum. Glacier-fed sites tended to have the lowest fish densities, whereas the highest densities were found near lakes. Mean fish length (4.1–9.6 cm) was positively related to the percentage cover of coarse substratum. Triplophysa was omnivorous, but the composition of the stomach contents varied greatly between sites and among individuals. Algal matter was ingested at most sites, but macroinvertebrates (Chironomidae, Baetidae and Simuliidae) dominated the ingestion (average 50–100. The trophic position of Triplophysa, identified from δ15N (‰) of the biota, varied between 2.6 and 4.2 among localities (mean 3.6) and was inversely related to the biomass of benthic algae, but unrelated to quantities of other potential food sources.

KW - feeding selectivity, food web, high altitude, omnivory, stable isotope analysis, stream type.

U2 - 10.1071/MF15225

DO - 10.1071/MF15225

M3 - Journal article

VL - 68

SP - 53

EP - 64

JO - Marine and Freshwater Research

JF - Marine and Freshwater Research

SN - 1323-1650

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 156505349