2021
DOI: 10.1029/2020wr029513
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Surviving Invasion: Regaining Native Fish Resilience Following Fish Invasions in a Modified Floodplain Landscape

Abstract: River floodplains are focal points for human development worldwide due to the ecosystem services they provide, especially for urbanization and agriculture (Tockner et al., 2008). To facilitate this development, floodplains of many of the world's large rivers have been subjected to extensive physical modifications

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Cited by 4 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…In NZ, such interactions have not been widely studied for large floodplain rivers (but see Collier et al 2019), although work undertaken in streams has highlighted the potential for interactions between water contaminants and increased water temperatures to affect invertebrate and periphyton communities in complex ways, with synergistic interactions possible (Piggott et al 2012(Piggott et al , 2015. For large rivers in the North Island such as the Waikato River, water contaminants and climate change are expected to interact synergistically to enhance the colonisation of invasive fish species such as cyprinids and Gambusia affinis that are tolerant of poor water quality and increased water temperatures (Collier et al 2015;Pingram et al 2021).…”
Section: Drivers: Root Causes Of Impactsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In NZ, such interactions have not been widely studied for large floodplain rivers (but see Collier et al 2019), although work undertaken in streams has highlighted the potential for interactions between water contaminants and increased water temperatures to affect invertebrate and periphyton communities in complex ways, with synergistic interactions possible (Piggott et al 2012(Piggott et al , 2015. For large rivers in the North Island such as the Waikato River, water contaminants and climate change are expected to interact synergistically to enhance the colonisation of invasive fish species such as cyprinids and Gambusia affinis that are tolerant of poor water quality and increased water temperatures (Collier et al 2015;Pingram et al 2021).…”
Section: Drivers: Root Causes Of Impactsmentioning
confidence: 99%