Authors
Stefanie Deinet, Kate Scott-Gatty, Hannah Rotton, William M Twardek, Valentina Marconi, Louise McRae, Lee J Baumgartner, Kerry Brink, Julie E Claussen, Steven J Cooke, William Darwall, Britas Klemens Eriksson, Carlos Garcia de Leaniz, Zeb Hogan, Joshua Royte, Luiz GM Silva, Michele L Thieme, David Tickner, John Waldman, Herman Wanningen, Olaf LF Weyl, Arjan Berkhuysen
Publication date
2020/7/28
Publisher
World Fish Migration Foundation
Description
Migratory freshwater fish (ie fish that use freshwater systems, either partly or exclusively) occur around the world and travel between critical habitats to complete their life cycle. They are disproportionately threatened compared to other fish groups but global trends in abun-dance, regional differences and drivers of patterns have not yet been comprehensively described. Using abundance information from the Living Planet Database, we found widespread declines between 1970 and 2016 in tropical and temperate areas and across all regions, all migration categories and all populations. Globally, migratory freshwater fish have declined by an average of 76%. Average declines have been more pronounced in Europe (-93%) and Latin America & Caribbean (-84%), and least in North America (-28%). The percentage of species represented was highest in the two temperate regions of Europe and North America (almost 50%). For the continents of Africa, Asia, Oceania, and South America, data was highly deficient, and we advise against making conclusions on the status of migratory freshwater SUMMARYfish in these areas. Potamodromous fish, have declined more than fish migrating between fresh and salt water on average (-83% vs-73%). Populations that are known to be affected by threats anywhere along their migration routes show an average decline of 94% while those not threatened at the population level have increased on av-erage. Habitat degradation, alteration, and loss accounted for around a half of threats to migratory fish, while over-exploitation accounted for around one-third. Protected, regulated and exploited populations decreased …
Total citations
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