Rm. Mcdowall, FIGHTING THE FLOW - DOWNSTREAM-UPSTREAM LINKAGES IN THE ECOLOGY OF DIADROMOUS FISH FAUNAS IN WEST-COAST NEW-ZEALAND RIVERS, Freshwater Biology, 40(1), 1998, pp. 111-122
1. Diadromy is a dominating behavioural characteristic of fish faunas
in New Zealand rivers, with amphidromy and catadromy being the most co
mmon strategies.2. Juvenile life stages of amphidromous and catadromou
s species migrate from the sea, through river systems, to find habitat
s for feeding, growth, maturation and reproduction. 3. Studies of fish
distributions in rivers of the West Coast of the South Island of New
Zealand show that, in most species, these migrations result in more or
less continuous distributions from the lower reaches to the upstream
limits of each species' range. 4. Upstream penetration of rivers varie
s widely between species and this generates downstream-upstream trajec
tories of declining species richness. 5. Parallel trajectories of decl
ining downstream-upstream abundance are likely in each species. 6. The
se patterns demonstrate the presence of downstream-upstream linkages i
n the community ecology of freshwater fishes in New Zealand rivers.