Natural river floodplains are among the Earth's most biologically diverse and productive ecosystems but face a range of critical threats due to human disturbance. Understanding the ecological processes that support biodiversity and productivity in floodplain rivers is essential for their future protection and rehabilitation. Fish assemblage structure on tropical river floodplains is widely considered to be driven by dispersal limitation during the wet season and by environmental filtering and interspecific interactions during the dry season. However, the individual-level movement behaviours (e.g. site attachment, nomadism, homing) that regulate dispersal of fish on floodplains are poorly understood. We combined radiotelemetry and remote sen...
Human activity has caused longitudinal fragmentation of many rivers. Fishways have been installed wo...
Variable hydrology of rivers strongly affects biophysical factors that influence primary production ...
The construction of dams and weirs, and associated changes to hydrological and hydraulic (e.g., wate...
Knowledge of the movement and habitat use of fishes is important in identifying and understanding th...
Lowland rivers are one of the most prominent freshwater ecosystems globally, yet are also one of the...
Globally, freshwater fisheries are faced with numerous impacts that compromise fish populations. A k...
In many intermittent, dryland rivers, fish are confined to isolated waterholes for much of the year....
Understanding the movement ecology of freshwater fishes, and how these patterns are affected by flow...
High levels of hydrological connectivity during seasonal flooding provide significant opportunities ...
Benjamin D. Walther is with Australian National University and UT Austin, Tim Dempster is with Unive...
Strong relationships between seasonal flooding, instream habitat structure and fish assemblages have...
Anthropogenic changes to river flows can alter hydrological connectivity and cues necessary for the ...
In dryland rivers, flow intermittency means fish populations are often subjected to drought disturba...
While flow regime is widely recognised as an over-arching feature structuring aquatic ecosystems, th...
Human activity has caused longitudinal fragmentation of many rivers. Fishways have been installed wo...
Variable hydrology of rivers strongly affects biophysical factors that influence primary production ...
The construction of dams and weirs, and associated changes to hydrological and hydraulic (e.g., wate...
Knowledge of the movement and habitat use of fishes is important in identifying and understanding th...
Lowland rivers are one of the most prominent freshwater ecosystems globally, yet are also one of the...
Globally, freshwater fisheries are faced with numerous impacts that compromise fish populations. A k...
In many intermittent, dryland rivers, fish are confined to isolated waterholes for much of the year....
Understanding the movement ecology of freshwater fishes, and how these patterns are affected by flow...
High levels of hydrological connectivity during seasonal flooding provide significant opportunities ...
Benjamin D. Walther is with Australian National University and UT Austin, Tim Dempster is with Unive...
Strong relationships between seasonal flooding, instream habitat structure and fish assemblages have...
Anthropogenic changes to river flows can alter hydrological connectivity and cues necessary for the ...
In dryland rivers, flow intermittency means fish populations are often subjected to drought disturba...
While flow regime is widely recognised as an over-arching feature structuring aquatic ecosystems, th...
Human activity has caused longitudinal fragmentation of many rivers. Fishways have been installed wo...
Variable hydrology of rivers strongly affects biophysical factors that influence primary production ...
The construction of dams and weirs, and associated changes to hydrological and hydraulic (e.g., wate...