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Marine and Freshwater Research Marine and Freshwater Research Society
Advances in the aquatic sciences

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This article has been peer reviewed and accepted for publication. It is in production and has not been edited, so may differ from the final published form.

Risk versus reward for responsive movements by a highly mobile fish species in a flow constrained and barrier-laden river.

Gavin Butler 0000-0003-4933-5306, Leo Cameron, Daniel Coleman, Brendan Ebner 0000-0001-8808-4998, Jason Thiem 0000-0002-5585-8560, Luke Carpenter-Bundhoo 0000-0002-9637-5231

Abstract

Context Understanding the movement behaviour of flow-dependent fish species is a foundational principle underlying the effective management of highly modified riverscapes. Aims To determine how variations in river discharge and instream barriers affect the residency, survival, and movement of golden perch (Macquaria ambigua) in the degraded Gwydir River system within the northern Murray-Darling Basin. Methods We monitored the movement of 25 acoustic tagged golden perch for up to three years using a linear array spanning ~180 km of the main river channels across the lower Gwydir catchment. Key results Golden perch were largely sedentary for extended periods, with movements constrained by the barrier-maze that now defines the system. High flows facilitated passage over instream barriers, with the highest periods of activity occurring in spring and early summer, and to a lesser extent in autumn. Conclusion Our findings are indicative of a highly constrained and isolated population of golden perch that is now likely neither a source nor a sink but is in effect a false sink perpetuated by re-stocking practices. Implications The rehabilitation of the fish community in the Gwydir and other systems in similarly poor condition throughout the Murray-Darling Basin will require major institutional and societal change.

MF24053  Accepted 06 September 2024

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