Connectivity and short-term flood interactively affect fish community
composition in drainage ditches of paddy fields in an agricultural
landscape
Abstract
Community assembly can change over time following variations in
connectivity among habitats. Previous studies have demonstrated the
influence of seasonal pulse floods on community structures by
facilitating species dispersal, but the effects of short-term flash
floods have been poorly investigated. We investigated fish community
structures before and after a short-term flood in drainage ditches of
paddy fields in the Kita River basin, Japan. The study sites were
classified into three connectivity types, “Transient” (connected only
during the flood, with a temporally-disappearing vertical gap between
drainage ditches and downstream rivers), “Connected” (always
connected, without the vertical gap), and “Disconnected” (always not
connected, with the vertical gap). The abundance of Misgurnus
anguillicaudatus, the only species that dispersed from paddy fields to
drainage ditches, increased after the flood irrespective of the
connectivity types, although the total abundance of the other species
significantly increased after the flood only in the “Transient” sites.
The dissimilarity of species composition between the (n-1)-th and n-th
surveys at each site was consistently low in the “Connected” and
“Disconnected” sites, whereas it rose just after the flood and
gradually declined in the “Transient” sites. Species composition was
significantly different among the connectivity types, indicating that
some fish species need stable connectivity even during the non-flood
period. The results showed that the short-term flood facilitated fish
dispersal from paddy fields by the increased water discharge and that
from downstream rivers by the temporary removal of vertical gap,
emphasizing the importance of hydrological connectivity for biodiversity
conservation in an agricultural landscape.