A protected flow breaks the drought for golden perch (Macquaria ambigua ) spawning along an extensive semi‐arid river system
Jason D. Thiem, Laura E. Michie, Gavin L. Butler, Brendan C. Ebner, Clayton P. Sharpe, Ivor Stuart, Anthony Townsend - Earth-Surface Processes
- Ecology
- Aquatic Science
- Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Abstract
Freshwater ecosystems are under extreme stress due to anthropogenic influences including changing climate, river regulation and water abstraction. Improving our understanding of the hydrological determinants of key life‐history processes of fish, as well as the spatial scales over which these processes occur, is fundamental to inform effective recovery actions. We monitored the spawning response of native fish to a drought‐breaking long‐distance flow pulse that was protected from extraction by a legal intervention order in Australia's northern Murray–Darling Basin. Sampling sites were distributed across >1600 km of the Barwon–Darling River and three of its major tributaries. Larvae of the pelagophilic golden perch (