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Study approach and step by step development of a fish-based multimetric index for reservoirs: a case study presentation from a neotropical cascade system

Abordagem de estudo e passo a passo para o desenvolvimento de um índice multimétrico baseado em peixes para reservatórios: apresentação de um estudo de caso de um sistema neotropical em cascata

Abstract

Aim

The present paper approached some issues related to the construction and adaptation of the Reservoir Fish Assemblage Index (RFAI).

Method

the case study presents the step by step construction of the multimetric index adopted for the Tietê cascade reservoir system, and it is discussed the comparison between discrete and continuous scoring criteria.

Results

The main questions related to the adaptation of multimetric indexes to reservoir were synthesized as: i – terminology question; ii - representative fish sampling; iii – reference condition. The construction of the RFAI for the Tietê cascade reservoir system resulted in seven steps, and the continuous scoring criterion showed to increase the accuracy of the final index when compared to the discrete scoring especially for the most degraded environment.

Conclusion

Biological criteria for the assessment of aquatic ecosystems are widely recognized and accepted by scientific community. The increasing value of water resource makes reservoirs important object of scientific and social interest, justifying the definition of proper tools for their assessment and monitoring. Among the available tools, the multimetric approach is one of the most popular. The observed results showed the validity of the approach also for artificial environments, expecting for its official incorporation in biomonitoring programs in Brazil.

Keywords:
biomonitoring; artificial environment; tropical area; icthyofauna

Resumo

Objetivo

Neste trabalho são abordados alguns assuntos relacionados com a construção e adaptação do índice da assembleia de peixes em reservatório (IAPR).

Método

O passo a passo da construção do índice multimétrico adaptado para o sistema de reservatórios em cascata do Rio Tietê (SP, Brasil) é apresentado como caso de estudo e a comparação entre critério de pontuação discreto e continuo é discutida.

Resultados

As principais questões relacionadas com a adaptação de índices multimétricos para reservatórios são: i – questão de terminologia; ii- amostragem representativa da ictiofauna; iii – condições de referência. A construção do Índice da Assembleia de Peixes em Reservatório (IAPR) para o sistema de reservatórios em cascata do Rio Tietê é descrita em sete passos e o critério de pontuação continua mostrou aumentar a precisão do índice em relação à pontuação discreta, especialmente no caso de ambientes mais degradados.

Conclusão

O uso de critérios biológicos para avaliação das condições dos ecossistemas aquáticos é amplamente reconhecido e aceito pela comunidade cientifica. O crescente valor estratégico da água faz dos reservatórios importantes objetos de interesse cientifico e social, justificando a necessidade de definir ferramentas adequadas de avaliação e monitoramento. Entre as várias ferramentas disponíveis, a abordagem multimétrica é atualmente uma das mais populares. Os resultados observados mostram a validade da abordagem também para ambientes artificiais, permitindo auspiciar a sua incorporação em programas oficiais de biomonitoramento no Brasil.

Palavras chaves:
biomonitoramento; ambientes artificiais; área tropical; ictiofauna

1. Introduction

The Index of Biotic Integrity (IBI) ( Karr, 1981 KARR, J.R. Assessment of biotic integrity using fish communities. Fisheries , 1981, 6(6), 21-27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1577/1548-8446(1981)006<0021:AOBIUF>2.0.CO;2.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1577/1548-8446(198...
) is one of the most popular tools for monitoring and diagnosis of aquatic environments in the world. It was proposed in 1981 responding to the requirement of the “Clean Water Act” (1972), which aim was “... restoring and maintaining the chemical, physical and biological integrity of the Nation’s waters” ( EPA, 2017 ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY – EPA. Introduction to the clean water act [online]. 2017 [viewed 13 December 2017]. Available from: https://cfpub.epa.gov/watertrain/moduleFrame.cfm?parent_object_id=2569
https://cfpub.epa.gov/watertrain/module...
, p. 2). It is a multimetric index where each metric represents an ecological attribute of the biological assemblages that changes in a predictable way with the increasing or decreasing of degradation ( Karr & Dudley, 1981 KARR, J.R. and DUDLEY, D.R. Ecological perspective on water quality goals. Environmental Management, 1981, 5(1), 55-68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF01866609.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF01866609 ...
). The assessment of environmental conditions is made by comparing the metrics of the biological assemblages at the study site with that of a preserved site located in the same ecoregion. The multimetric approach is a very useful tool and may be applied to different environments and groups of organisms. In scientific literature there are examples of adaptation to small and big river ( Karr et al., 1986 KARR, J.R., FAUSCH, K.D., ANGERMEIER, P.L., YANT, P.R. and SCHLOSSER, I.J. Assessing biological integrity in running waters: a method and its rationale. Illinois Natural History Survey Special Publication, 1986, 5, 1-28. ; Emery et al., 2003 EMERY, E.B., SIMON, T.P., MCCORMICK, F.H., ANGERMEIER, P.L., DESHON, J.E., YODER, C.O., SANDERS, R.E., PEARSON, W.D., HICKMAN, G.D., REASH, R.J. and THOMAS, J.A. Development of a multimetric index for assessing the biological condition of the Ohio River. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society, 2003, 132(4), 791-808. http://dx.doi.org/10.1577/T01-076.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1577/T01-076 ...
), lakes ( Uzarski et al., 2005 UZARSKI, D.G., BURTON, T.M., COOPER, M.J., INGRAM, J.W. and TIMMERMANS, S.T.A. Fish habitat use within and across wetland classes in coastal wetlands of the five Great Lakes: development of a fish-based index of biotic integrity. Journal of Great Lakes Research , 2005, 31(1), 171-187. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0380-1330(05)70297-5.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0380-1330(05...
; Irz et al., 2006 IRZ, P., ODION, M., ARGILLIER, C. and PONT, D. Comparison between the fish communities of lakes, reservoirs and rivers: can natural systems help define the ecological potential of reservoirs? Aquatic Sciences, 2006, 68(1), 109-116. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00027-005-0812-3.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00027-005-08...
; Beck & Hatch, 2009 BECK, M.W. and HATCH, L.K. A review of research on the development of lake indices of biotic integrity. Environmental Review, 2009, 17(NA), 21-44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/A09-001.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/A09-001 ...
), reservoirs ( Jennings et al., 1995 JENNINGS, M.J., FORE, L.S. and KARR, J.R. Biological monitoring of fish assemblages in Tennessee Valley reservoirs. Regulated Rivers: Research and Management, 1995, 11(3-4), 263-274. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/rrr.3450110303.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/rrr.345011030...
; McDonough & Hickman, 1999 MCDONOUGH, T.A. and HICKMAN, G.D. Reservoir fish assemblage index development: a tool for assessing ecological health in Tennessee Valley Authority impoundments. In: T.P. SIMON, ed. Assessing the sustainability and Biological Integrity of water resources using fish communities. Boca Raton: CRC Press, 1999, pp. 523-540. ), estuaries, wetland, and marine coastal waters ( Delpech et al., 2010 DELPECH, C., COURRAT, A., PASQUAUD, S., LOBRY, J., LE PAPE, O., NICOLAS, D., BOËT, P., GIRARDIN, M. and LEPAGE, M. Development of a fish-based index to assess the ecological quality of transitional waters: The case of French estuaries. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 2010, 60(6), 908-918. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2010.01.001. PMid:20097384.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2...
). In relation to organisms, the most used are the phytoplankton ( Hill et al., 2003 HILL, B.H., HERLIHY, A.T., KAUFMANN, P.R., DECELLES, S.J. and BORGH, M.A.V. Assessment of streams of the eastern United States using a periphyton index of biotic integrity. Ecological Indicators, 2003, 2(4), 325-338. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1470-160X(02)00062-6.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1470-160X(02...
; Wu et al., 2012 WU, N., SCHMALZ, B. and FOHRER, N. Development and testing of a phytoplankton index of biotic integrity (P-IBI) for a German lowland river. Ecological Indicators , 2012, 13(1), 158-167. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2011.05.022.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.201...
), macroinvertebrate ( Klemm et al., 2002 KLEMM, D.J., BLOCKSOM, K.A., THOENY, W.T., FULK, F.A., HERLIHY, A.T., KAUFMANN, P.R. and CORMIER, S.M. Methods development and use of macroinvertebrates as indicators of ecological conditions for streams in the mid-atlantic highlands region. Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, 2002, 78(2), 169-212. http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1016363718037. PMid:12229921.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:10163637180...
; Blocksom & Johnson, 2009 BLOCKSOM, K.A. and JOHNSON, B.R. Development of a regional macroinvertebrate index for large river bioassessment. Ecological Indicators, 2009, 9(2), 313-328. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2008.05.005.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.200...
), fish ( McCormick at al., 2001 MCCORMICK, R.M., HUGHES, R.M., KAUFMANN, P.M., PECK, D.V., STODDARD, J.L. and HERLIHY, A.T. Development of an index of biotic integrity for the mid-atlantic highlands region. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society, 2001, 130(5), 857-877. http://dx.doi.org/10.1577/1548-8659(2001)130<0857:DOAIOB>2.0.CO;2.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1577/1548-8659(200...
; Magalhães et al., 2008 MAGALHÃES, M.F., RAMALHO, C.E. and COLLARES-PEREIRA, M.J. Assessing biotic integrity in a Mediterranean watershed: development and evaluation of a fish-based index. Fisheries Management and Ecology, 2008, 15(4), 273-289. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2400.2008.00612.x.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2400.2...
; Terra et al., 2013 TERRA, B.F., HUGHES, R.M., FRANCELINO, M.R. and ARAÚJO, F.G. Assessment of biotic condition of Atlantic Rain Forest streams: A fish-based multimetric approach. Ecological Indicators, 2013, 34, 136-148. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2013.05.001.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.201...
), and macrophytes ( Ferreira et al., 2005 FERREIRA, M.T., RODRÍGUEZ-GONZÁLEZ, P.M., AGUIAR, F.C. and ALBUQUERQUE, A. Assessing biotic integrity in Iberian rivers: Development of a multimetric plant index. Ecological Indicators, 2005, 5(2), 137-149. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2005.01.001.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.200...
; Beck et al., 2010 BECK, M.W., HATCH, L.K., VONDRACEK, B. and VALLEY, R.D. Development of a macrophyte-based index of biotic integrity for Minnesota lakes. Ecological Indicators , 2010, 10(5), 968-979. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2010.02.006.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.201...
). Some multi-taxon combinations have been proposed, such as phyto-benthos and macroinvertebrates, fish and macrophytes, fish and amphibians ( Abbasi & Abbasi, 2012 ABBASI, T. and ABBASI, S.A. Water quality indices. Great Britain: Elsevier, 2012. ; Lougheed et al., 2007 LOUGHEED, V.L., PARKER, C.A. and STEVENSON, R.J. Using non-linear responses of multiple taxonomic groups to establish criteria indicative of wetland biological condition. Wetlands, 2007, 27(1), 96-109. http://dx.doi.org/10.1672/0277-5212(2007)27[96:UNROMT]2.0.CO;2.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1672/0277-5212(200...
; Everard et al., 2011 EVERARD, M., FLETCHER, M.S., POWELL, A. and DOBSON, M.K. The feasibility of developing multi-taxa indicators for landscape scale assessment of freshwater systems. Freshwater Reviews , 2011, 4(1), 1-19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1608/FRJ-4.1.129.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1608/FRJ-4.1.129 ...
). Most research, however, focused on fish ( Ruaro & Gubiani, 2013 RUARO, R. and GUBIANI, E.A. A scientometric assessment of 30 years of the Index of Biotic Integrity in aquatic ecosystems: applications and main flaws. Ecological Indicators , 2013, 29, 105-110. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2012.12.016.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.201...
). Fishes are historically considered good indicators because they are sensitive, persistent, recover quickly from natural disturbances, integrate the negative effects of environmental degradation, and they are long-living organisms ( Fausch et al., 1990 FAUSCH, K.D., LYONS, J., KARR, J.R. and ANGERMEIER, P.L. Fish communities as indicators of environmental degradation. American Fisheries Society Symposium, 1990, 8, 123-144. ). Thus, they are indicators of long-term environmental stresses, and aspects related to taxonomic classification, distribution, life cycle, and tolerance are known for many species. Another advantage is that body size and weight data may be easily obtained in the field, decreasing the processing time at laboratory. Moreover, fish are suitable to evaluate the social costs of degradation because of human empathy and the economic benefit provided from them.

Dams are among the greatest human impacts on the aquatic ecosystem, but the use of biological criteria to assess the reservoir ecosystem conditions is still rare. The Society is highly dependent from ecosystem services, and the need for multiple water uses is increasing the strategic value of water. Maintaining or restoring the health of these ecosystems is essential to respond to society's current and future demand. For this purpose, the development of adequate assessment tools cannot be delayed. In fact, reservoirs are part of the landscape in many countries around the world, and their impact on the river ecosystem can not be reversed in the short or medium time. In this context, Brazil is no exception with more than 600 large dams occupying its territory ( Agostinho et al., 2007 AGOSTINHO, A.A., GOMES, L.C. and PELICICE, F.M. Ecologia e manejo de recursos pesqueiros em reservatórios do Brasil. Maringá: EDUEM, 2007. ). The demand for hydroelectric production led to the transformation of many rivers into cascade of reservoirs, as the case of the Paraná River and its main tributaries.

Some issues related to the adaptation of the multimetric index as: i – terminology question; ii - representative fish sampling and iii – reference condition were approached in this study, and the step by step index construction adopted for the Tietê cascade reservoir system is presented as case study.

2. Terminology Question

In relation to terminology, Jennings et al. (1995) JENNINGS, M.J., FORE, L.S. and KARR, J.R. Biological monitoring of fish assemblages in Tennessee Valley reservoirs. Regulated Rivers: Research and Management, 1995, 11(3-4), 263-274. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/rrr.3450110303.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/rrr.345011030...
states that reservoirs are man-made environments, so the term “biological integrity” is not proper for them. As alternative, they suggest “Reservoir Fish Assemblage Index” (RFAI) as most suitable. The term “biological integrity” should be reserved only to situations close to pristine conditions.

3. Representative Fish Sampling

This point is related to the difficulty to obtain a “representative fish sampling”. It is a common problem to all lentic habitats, but in reservoirs it is magnified by the peculiar characteristics of these environments. In fact, reservoirs are heterogeneous in three space dimensions (longitudinal, transversal, and vertical), hybrid between rivers and lakes, and with the hydraulic cycle independent from the natural river flow, because it is imposed by the requirements of the electric production or by the water uses ( Straškraba & Tundisi, 1999 STRAŠKRABA, M. and TUNDISI, J.G. Reservoir ecosystem functioning: theory and application. In: J.G. TUNDISI, and M. STRAŠKRABA, eds. Theoretical reservoir ecology and its applications. São Carlos: IIE, 1999. pp. 565-583. ). Thus, reservoir requires an extremely careful sampling design aiming the exploration of all the reservoir zones and habitats. Systematic or stratified probabilistic designs are the most common strategies, however, depending on the number of reservoirs including in the study, more complex designs are proposed, such as the General Random Tessellation Stratified Design (GRTS). In this case, the GRTS allows a more balanced distribution of sampling sites in the ecoregion ( Stevens Junior & Olsen, 2004 STEVENS JUNIOR, D.L. and OLSEN, A.R. Spatially balanced sampling of natural resources. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 2004, 99(465), 262-278. http://dx.doi.org/10.1198/016214504000000250.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1198/0162145040000...
).

Sampling period and fish sampling gears should be appropriately chosen. In the case of sampling period, the reservoir hydraulic cycle may be known. Normally, hydroelectric reservoirs are classified as accumulation or run-of-the-river. Accumulation reservoirs have a regulatory function assuring the hydroelectric production target along the cascade system, independently of seasonal rains or river flood natural regimes. Thus, they display higher water level fluctuation during the year, unlike the run-of-the-rivers. In this way, it is recommended to concentrate the fish sampling when the hydraulic cycle is more stable to limit the index variability and allow the comparison among reservoirs with different hydraulic management in the same system or ecoregion. In the case of the Tietê reservoir system, for example, Barra Bonita reservoir ( Figure 1 a) displays higher level fluctuation than Bariri ( Figure 1 b), thus the better index period for these reservoirs is between August and September or February and March.

Figure 1
Hydraulic cycle of Barra Bonita (A) and Bariri (B) reservoirs. Barra Bonita is an accumulation reservoir, and Bariri is a run-of-the-river reservoir. The solid horizontal line is the yearly mean water level (m a.s.l.). Range is the yearly water level fluctuation. Red circles indicate the best “index period” corresponding to comparable hydraulic conditions through the system (August-September or February-March). Shadow area: rainy season (October-March). Barra Bonita hydraulic series: 1969-2002; Bariri hydraulic series: 1988-2008.

Considering the sampling gear, according to Karr et al. (1986) KARR, J.R., FAUSCH, K.D., ANGERMEIER, P.L., YANT, P.R. and SCHLOSSER, I.J. Assessing biological integrity in running waters: a method and its rationale. Illinois Natural History Survey Special Publication, 1986, 5, 1-28. , the sampling methods must be standardized and the relative abundances of the fish populations should be representative of its true values without bias toward taxa or fish size. Therefore, the fishing effort may be adapted to the study environment, and little selective fishing gear or a combination of gears may be used to maximize the capture. The most common fishing gears used in reservoirs are electrofishing equipment and gillnets. In Brazil, most experimental fishing in reservoirs has been carried out by gillnet set with different mesh sizes (i.e. from 3 to 12 cm between opposite knots) ( Terra & Araújo, 2011 TERRA, B.F. and ARAÚJO, F.G. A preliminary fish assemblage index for a transitional river-reservoir system in southeastern Brazil. Ecological Indicators , 2011, 11(3), 874-881. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2010.11.006.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.201...
; Petesse et al., 2014 PETESSE, M.L., PETRERE JUNIOR, M. and AGOSTINHO, Â.A. Defining a fish bio-assessment tool to monitoring the biological condition of a cascade reservoirs system in tropical area. Ecological Engineering, 2014, 69, 139-150. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.2014.03.070.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.201...
). According to Jennings et al. (1995) JENNINGS, M.J., FORE, L.S. and KARR, J.R. Biological monitoring of fish assemblages in Tennessee Valley reservoirs. Regulated Rivers: Research and Management, 1995, 11(3-4), 263-274. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/rrr.3450110303.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/rrr.345011030...
, the variability of RFAI increases when the effort is little. Thus, they recommend concentrate the sampling of fish assemblages at the shoreline and increase the fishing effort (between 15-20 electro-fishing runs and set of 10-12 different gillnet mesh sizes). In fact, in reservoirs the shoreline habitat is more complex than the pelagic, due to the presence of macrophyte beds, riparian vegetation or logs of impounded trees that provide food and shelter for fish ( Jennings et al., 1999 JENNINGS, M.J., LYONS, J., EMMONS, E.E., HATZENBELER, G.R., BOZEK, M.A., SIMONSON, T.D., BEARD JUNIOR, T.D. and FAGO, D. Toward the development of an index of biotic integrity for inland lakes in Wisconsin. In: T.P. SIMON, ed. Assessing the sustainability and biological integrity of water resources using fish communities. Boca Raton: CRC Press, 1999, pp. 541-562. ). Sample rarefaction curves obtained using non-parametric estimator of species richness (Jackknife, Chao 1 or Chao 2) may be applied to verify the efficiency of the sampling effort.

4. Reference Conditions

Reference conditions, in its original definition, refer to a pristine environment where the evolutionary conditions of organisms are preserved out of anthropogenic effects ( Karr & Chu, 1999 KARR, J.R. and CHU, E.W. Restoring life in running waters: better biological monitoring . Washington: Island Press, 1999. ). Measuring the deviation from the reference condition means to measure the degradation level of the system as a consequence of anthropogenic action. Therefore, keeping integrity means saving the living system, and it allows the maintenance of ecosystem services which we depend on. Considering the difficulty to find truly pristine environments, Stoddard et al. (2006) STODDARD, J.L., LARSEN, D.P., HAWKINS, C.P., JOHNSON, R.K. and NORRIS, R.H. Setting expectations for the ecological condition of streams: the concept of reference condition. Ecological Applications, 2006, 16(4), 1267-1276. http://dx.doi.org/10.1890/1051-0761(2006)016[1267:SEFTEC]2.0.CO;2. PMid:16937796.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1890/1051-0761(200...
define five types of reference conditions for multimetric assessment in the United States:

  1. 1

    Minimally Disturbed Condition (MDC): refers to an environmental situation without significant expression of human impact. In this condition, we admit that part of the observed variability is due to the anthropic interference, but it does not affect the natural development of organisms. It is our best approximation to the pristine condition.

  2. 2

    Least Disturbed Condition (LDC): this condition is related to the best environmental physical and chemical condition observed in the study area. Considering that environmental conditions may change (worsen or improve) in time, also the “Least Disturbed Condition” changes, so it requires continuous assessment.

  3. 3

    Best attainable Condition (BAC): refers to the “expected” ecological condition, when the best possible management practices are applied. It is a theoretical condition and represents the expected environmental recovery, when management, technological resources, and good land use practices are applied.

  4. 4

    Historical Condition (HC): describes the environmental condition at a given period in the past. It is a good reference if the chosen historical moment is prior to any human disturbance practices (i.e.: pre-Intensive agriculture, pre-Industrial age, North American pre-Colombian era).

  5. 5

    Professional judgment (PJ): it is based on the “subjective” interpretation of the observed conditions by an expert familiar with the study area.

A different approach is proposed by the European Water Framework Directive ( EC, 2000 EUROPEAN COMMUNITY – EC. Directive 2000/60/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council establishing a Framework for the Community Action in the Field of Water Policy. Journal of European Communication, 2000, L327, 1-72. ). The Directive referring to artificial or highly modified environments that cannot return to their original conditions, indicates the Good Ecological Potential (GEP) as the recovery objective ( Figure 2 ).

Figure 2
Comparison between Ecological Status (for natural ecosystem) and Ecological Potential (for artificial or highly modified environments) from the European WFD ( EC, 2000 EUROPEAN COMMUNITY – EC. Directive 2000/60/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council establishing a Framework for the Community Action in the Field of Water Policy. Journal of European Communication, 2000, L327, 1-72. ).

The GEP derives from ecological state levels of natural environments, for which the recovery objective is the Maximum Ecological Status (MES) ( Borja & Elliott, 2007 BORJA, A. and ELLIOTT, M. What does “good ecological potential” mean, within the European Water Framework Directive? Marine Pollution Bulletin, 2007, 54(10), 1559-1564. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2007.09.002. PMid:17903563.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2...
). In theory, the GEP to be adopted for reservoirs or highly modified environments, may be that of the most similar corresponding natural environment. However, considering that reservoirs are hybrid between river and lake, it is not clear if the GEP to be adopted is that of natural rivers or lakes. Irz et al. (2006) IRZ, P., ODION, M., ARGILLIER, C. and PONT, D. Comparison between the fish communities of lakes, reservoirs and rivers: can natural systems help define the ecological potential of reservoirs? Aquatic Sciences, 2006, 68(1), 109-116. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00027-005-0812-3.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00027-005-08...
, performed a comparative study among lakes, rivers, and reservoirs in France to answer the question. The conclusion showed that reservoirs cannot be considered similar to lakes a priori , reinforcing the need to define specific reference objectives for these environments ( Petesse et al. 2014 PETESSE, M.L., PETRERE JUNIOR, M. and AGOSTINHO, Â.A. Defining a fish bio-assessment tool to monitoring the biological condition of a cascade reservoirs system in tropical area. Ecological Engineering, 2014, 69, 139-150. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.2014.03.070.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.201...
). In practice, the best observed condition (Least Disturbed Condition) is used as reference for reservoir, and to clearly show the variability of the environmental conditions within or among reservoir, it is useful to include sites minimally and highly impacted ( Joy & Death, 2004 JOY, M.K. and DEATH, R.G. Application of the index of biotic integrity methodology to New Zealand freshwater fish communities. Environmental Management, 2004, 34(3), 415-428. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00267-004-0083-0. PMid:15520898.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00267-004-00...
).

5. Advantages of the Multimetric Approach

Multimetric indices are effective tools for environmental diagnosis and monitoring purpose. They may be applied to all types of monitoring programs (general, operational, investigative), allowing the identification of sites with high integrity or degraded conditions. Multimetric indices may also be used to assess the recovering processes, as well as the sustainable use of natural resources, and in the management or policy planning about maintenance and conservation of aquatic ecosystems. Another advantage of biomonitoring is that, depending on the organism, we may have responses at different time scale satisfying short, medium, and long term assessment requirements. Unlike physical and chemical variables, that provide information only at the moment of the sampling time, organisms are persistent and allow an integrated view of the environmental conditions ( Abbasi & Abbasi, 2012 ABBASI, T. and ABBASI, S.A. Water quality indices. Great Britain: Elsevier, 2012. ). At this purpose, for the general monitoring program, the Water Framework Directive ( EC, 2000 EUROPEAN COMMUNITY – EC. Directive 2000/60/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council establishing a Framework for the Community Action in the Field of Water Policy. Journal of European Communication, 2000, L327, 1-72. ) suggests a different sampling frequency according to the taxonomic group of biological elements. For phytoplankton, it suggest a sampling frequency every six-month; for macroinvertebrates every 1-3 years; for macrophytes and fish every 3 years. Also, depending on the environment type, it is possible to choose the biotic assemblages best suited for the monitoring objective ( EC, 2005 EUROPEAN COMMUNITY – EC. Overall approach to the classification of ecological status and ecological potential. Luxembourg: EC, 2005. Guidance document, no 13. ).

6. Case Study

The study of Petesse et al. (2014) PETESSE, M.L., PETRERE JUNIOR, M. and AGOSTINHO, Â.A. Defining a fish bio-assessment tool to monitoring the biological condition of a cascade reservoirs system in tropical area. Ecological Engineering, 2014, 69, 139-150. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.2014.03.070.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.201...
on the cascade reservoir system of the Tietê River (SP, Brazil) is an example of the adaptation of multimetric approach to neotropical reservoirs. In this study, the Reservoir Fish Assemblage Index (RFAI) was adapted to five out six reservoirs of the cascade system. The studied reservoirs ordered from upstream to downstream, were: Barra Bonita, Bariri, Ibitinga, Promissão, and Nova Avanhandava. The study shows the step by step index construction, identifies the “index period” (the best sampling period - dry or rainy season), and tested the effect of the measurement unit of the metrics (fish number or weight) on the index performance. Thus, two indexes were developed and compared: the RFAI-N with metrics calculated from the fish abundance, and the RFAI-W with metrics calculated from the fish weight.

A total of 72 sites (24 in Barra Bonita, 6 in Bariri, 6 in Ibitinga, 24 in Promissão, and 12 in Nova Avanhandava) were selected for the ichthyofauna sampling. The sample design was stratified by “zone” (fluvial, transition and lentic) in each reservoir, and within each zone, three different habitats were randomly selected: reservoir shoreline (L), mouth of tributaries (D), and center (C).

The sampling methodology was standardized by using a set of 10 gillnets with mesh sizes from 3 to 12 cm between opposing knots and “covo”. The latter, that is a fish trap, was used to sample fish species with little body size living close to macrophytes beds. At each sampling site, some physico-chemical and environmental variables were recorded (see Petesse et al., 2014 PETESSE, M.L., PETRERE JUNIOR, M. and AGOSTINHO, Â.A. Defining a fish bio-assessment tool to monitoring the biological condition of a cascade reservoirs system in tropical area. Ecological Engineering, 2014, 69, 139-150. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.2014.03.070.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.201...
for details). Samples were collected at two seasons: in dry period (August-September) and in rainy period (February).

Sample rarefaction curves ( Krebs, 1999 KREBS, C. J. Ecological methodology. 2. ed. San Francisco: Benjamin Cummings, 1999. ) by reservoir showed a tendency to stabilize in all the reservoirs except Bariri, indicating that the sampling effort was sufficient in the complex ( Figure 3 ).

Figure 3
Rarefaction curves by samples based on the non-parametric Chao2 estimator ( Colwell et al., 2004 COLWELL, R.K., MAO, C.X. and CHANG, J. Interpolating, extrapolating, and comparing incidence-based species accumulation curves. Ecology, 2004, 85(10), 2717-2727. http://dx.doi.org/10.1890/03-0557.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1890/03-0557 ...
) applied to species presence/absence data of the Tietê cascade reservoir system (SP, Brazil). Blue lines = 95% confidence limits.

The RFAI construction process followed the steps summarized in Figure 4 .

Figure 4
Steps (1 to 7) for fish-multimetric index construction.

Step 1: Division of the original data set in Development and Validation set. The development set is used to identify sites in best conditions, select the candidate metrics, score the selected metrics, and calculate the final index. The Validation set is as an independent data set; it is randomly extracted from the original data set and used to evaluate the performance of metrics, and of the final index ( Hughes et al., 1998 HUGHES, R.M., KAUFMANN, P.R., HERLIHY, A.T., KINCAID, T.M., REYNOLDS, L. and LARSEN, D.P. A process for developing and evaluating indices of fish assemblage integrity. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 1998, 55(7), 1618-1631. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/f98-060.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/f98-060 ...
; Astin, 2007; ASTIN, L.E. Developing biological indicators from diverse data: the Potamac Basin-wide Index of Benthic Integrity (B-IBI). Ecological Indicators, 2007, 7(4), 895-908. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2006.09.004.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.200...
Magalhães et al., 2008 MAGALHÃES, M.F., RAMALHO, C.E. and COLLARES-PEREIRA, M.J. Assessing biotic integrity in a Mediterranean watershed: development and evaluation of a fish-based index. Fisheries Management and Ecology, 2008, 15(4), 273-289. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2400.2008.00612.x.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2400.2...
).

Step 2: Candidate metrics. All candidate metrics represent an ecological attribute of fish assemblages that change in a predicable way with the degradation of the aquatic environment ( Karr et al., 1986 KARR, J.R., FAUSCH, K.D., ANGERMEIER, P.L., YANT, P.R. and SCHLOSSER, I.J. Assessing biological integrity in running waters: a method and its rationale. Illinois Natural History Survey Special Publication, 1986, 5, 1-28. ; Karr, 2006 KARR, J.R. Seven foundations of biological monitoring and assessment. Biologia Ambientale, 2006, 20, 7-18. ). Metrics were grouped in: i - species richness and composition, ii - abundance and weight, iii - trophic composition, iv - health/reproductive and behavioural traits. Based on these criteria, 24 metrics were individuated for the Tietê reservoir system.

Step 3: Metric selection. Metric selection occurs through the sequential application of several statistical tests ( Oliveira et al., 2008 OLIVEIRA, B.S.R., CASTRO, C.M. and BAPTISTA, D.F. Desenvolvimento de índices multimétricos para utilização em programas de monitoramento biológico da integridade de ecossistemas aquáticos. Oecologia Brasiliensis, 2008, 12(3), 463-486. ). According to Whittier (1999) WHITTIER, T.R. Development of IBI metrics for lakes in Southern New England. In: T.P. SIMON, ed. Assessing the sustainability and biological integrity of water resources using fish communities. Boca Raton: CRC Press, 1999, pp. 563-582. , it avoids subjectivity in the choice of metrics. The tests applied to the Tietê reservoir system, were: i - the range test, ii - the responsiveness test, and iii – the redundancy test. For details on the exclusion criteria followed by each test, see Petesse et al. (2014) PETESSE, M.L., PETRERE JUNIOR, M. and AGOSTINHO, Â.A. Defining a fish bio-assessment tool to monitoring the biological condition of a cascade reservoirs system in tropical area. Ecological Engineering, 2014, 69, 139-150. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.2014.03.070.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.201...
. Finally, nine metrics were selected to enter in the final indexes. Four metrics were common to the two indices (RFAI-N and RFAI-W), and five specific to each of them ( Table 1 ).

Table 1
Selected metrics for RFAI-N and RFAI-W for the Tietê cascade reservoir system (see Petesse et al., 2014 PETESSE, M.L., PETRERE JUNIOR, M. and AGOSTINHO, Â.A. Defining a fish bio-assessment tool to monitoring the biological condition of a cascade reservoirs system in tropical area. Ecological Engineering, 2014, 69, 139-150. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.2014.03.070.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.201...
for details).

Step 4: Scoring criterion. The scoring criterion is an important step, once it allows to join metrics originally measured in different units, enabling the final index calculation. Two different kinds of scoring criteria are available: the discrete and the continuous. In the Tietê case study, the discrete criterion was applied according to Karr (1981) KARR, J.R. Assessment of biotic integrity using fish communities. Fisheries , 1981, 6(6), 21-27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1577/1548-8446(1981)006<0021:AOBIUF>2.0.CO;2.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1577/1548-8446(198...
. Thus, the interval between 5th and 95th percentiles of the metric values was trisected and the discrete score of 1, 3 or 5 was applied to the metric raw value, depending on whether it deviates greatly from (score 1), somewhat from (score 3), or if comparable to the reference value (score 5). In this way, values in the upper third, for metric that decreased with degradation, received score 5, and that in the lower third, received score 1. An opposite scoring order was used in the case of metric that increased with degradation ( Gerritsen et al., 2003 GERRITSEN, J., CARLSON, R.E., DYCUS, D.L., FAULKNER, C., GIBSON, G.R., HARCUM, J. and MARKOWITZ, S.A. Lake and reservoir bioassessment and biocriteria. Washington: Office of Water, US Environmental Protection Agency, 2003. Technical Guidance Document, EPA-841-B-98-007. ).

Step 5: Final index. The final index was obtained by summing the partial scores of each metric. The RFAI-N and RFAI-W indices varied from a minimum 9 to a maximum 45. Both were highly correlated to each other and able to detect a clear longitudinal recovery gradient among the five reservoirs. Barra Bonita presented the worse condition and Nova Avanhandava the best ( Table 2 ).

Table 2
Mean values, standard deviation, minimum and maximum values of the final RFAI-N and RFAI-W for the Tietê cascade reservoir system (see Petesse et al., 2014 PETESSE, M.L., PETRERE JUNIOR, M. and AGOSTINHO, Â.A. Defining a fish bio-assessment tool to monitoring the biological condition of a cascade reservoirs system in tropical area. Ecological Engineering, 2014, 69, 139-150. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.2014.03.070.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.201...
for details).

Step 6: Validation. The indices ability to reproduce similar scores from an independent data set was verified with the aid of the Validation Set (VS) initially separated from the original data set. The RFAI-VS was obtained using the same metrics and scoring criteria previously defined by the Development Set (DS). Two validation processes were performed: one for the RFAI-N and one for the RFAI-W. The indices comparison did not show a significant statistical difference, thus validating the index process construction. The RFAI-N and RFAI-W indices were also positively correlated with the Ist axis of the principal component analysis (PCA) based on the physical-chemical and environmental variables recorded in the field, which revealed a clear longitudinal improvement gradient.

Step 7: Quality classes. From the final index, four quality classes were defined: very poor, poor, fair, and good. The results showed that about 50% of Barra Bonita and Bariri sampling sites were in poor condition, and despite the improvement in reservoir biotic conditions from upstream to downstream, only one site in the Promissão reservoir, and two sites in the Nova Avanhandava reservoir (only for the RFAI-W) showed good conditions. The longitudinal improvement revealed by the indices was previously observed by CETESB (2017) COMPANHIA AMBIENTAL DO ESTADO DE SÃO PAULO – CETESB. Qualidade das águas interiores no estado de São Paulo 2016. São Paulo: CETESB, 2017. Série Relatórios. and Barbosa et al. (1999) BARBOSA, F.A.R., PADISAK, J., ESPINDOLA, E.L.G., BORICS, G. and ROCHA, O. The cascading reservoir continuum concept (CRCC) and its application to the river Tietê-Basin, São Paulo State Brazil. In: J.G. Tundisi and M. Straškraba, eds. Theoretical reservoir ecology and its applications. Leiden: Backhuys Publishers, 1999, pp. 425-438. on water quality variables. However, considering that no sites were classified as “very poor” by the RFAI, three quality classes may be used, being: impaired, moderately impaired, and acceptable, as adopted by Terra & Araújo (2011) TERRA, B.F. and ARAÚJO, F.G. A preliminary fish assemblage index for a transitional river-reservoir system in southeastern Brazil. Ecological Indicators , 2011, 11(3), 874-881. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2010.11.006.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.201...
.

7. Scoring Criteria: Continuous vs Discrete

Although many indices use a discrete scoring some authors ( Hughes et al., 1998; HUGHES, R.M., KAUFMANN, P.R., HERLIHY, A.T., KINCAID, T.M., REYNOLDS, L. and LARSEN, D.P. A process for developing and evaluating indices of fish assemblage integrity. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 1998, 55(7), 1618-1631. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/f98-060.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/f98-060 ...
Klemm et al., 2003 KLEMM, D.J., BLOCKSOM, K.A., FULK, F.A., HERLIHY, A.T., HUGHES, R.M., KAUFMANN, P.R., PECK, D.V., STODDARD, J.L., THOENY, W.T., GRIFFITH, M.B. and DAVIS, W.S. Development and Evaluation of a Macroinvertebrate Biotic Integrity Index (MBII) for Regionally Assessing Mid-Atlantic Highlands Streams. Environmental Management, 2003, 31(5), 656-669. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00267-002-2945-7. PMid:12719895.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00267-002-29...
; Blocksom & Johnson, 2009) BLOCKSOM, K.A. and JOHNSON, B.R. Development of a regional macroinvertebrate index for large river bioassessment. Ecological Indicators, 2009, 9(2), 313-328. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2008.05.005.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.200...
suggest that the continuous scoring is more effective, because it increases the index accuracy thus reflecting the observed conditions clearly.

To verify this aspect in the case of the Tietê cascade reservoir system, the metric score was recalculated using the continuous criterion, and the final indices compared with the discrete ones. For this purpose, the index scales from continuous and discrete criterion were standardized following Angradi et al. (2009) ANGRADI, T.R., PEARSON, M.S., JICHA, T.M., TAYLOR, D.L., BOLGRIEN, D.W., MOFFETT, M.F., BLOCKSOM, K.A. and HILL, B.H. Using stressor gradients to determine reference expectations for great river fish assemblages. Ecological Indicators, 2009, 9(4), 748-764. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2008.09.007.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.200...
. The continuous scores were assigned following Klemm et al. (2003) KLEMM, D.J., BLOCKSOM, K.A., FULK, F.A., HERLIHY, A.T., HUGHES, R.M., KAUFMANN, P.R., PECK, D.V., STODDARD, J.L., THOENY, W.T., GRIFFITH, M.B. and DAVIS, W.S. Development and Evaluation of a Macroinvertebrate Biotic Integrity Index (MBII) for Regionally Assessing Mid-Atlantic Highlands Streams. Environmental Management, 2003, 31(5), 656-669. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00267-002-2945-7. PMid:12719895.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00267-002-29...
, Blocksom & Johnson (2009) BLOCKSOM, K.A. and JOHNSON, B.R. Development of a regional macroinvertebrate index for large river bioassessment. Ecological Indicators, 2009, 9(2), 313-328. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2008.05.005.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.200...
, and Terra et al. (2013) TERRA, B.F., HUGHES, R.M., FRANCELINO, M.R. and ARAÚJO, F.G. Assessment of biotic condition of Atlantic Rain Forest streams: A fish-based multimetric approach. Ecological Indicators, 2013, 34, 136-148. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2013.05.001.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.201...
. In particular for metrics that decrease with impairment, values upper the 95th percentile were scored 10, and values lower the 5th percentile received score 0. Metric values in the interval 5th-95th were linearly interpolated. An inverted score was assigned in case of metrics that increase with degradation.

The indices comparisons did not show any strong difference among the distribution values of the two scoring criteria, but Barra Bonita reservoir. Analysing the index value by sampling site, we observed that discrete scoring criterion tends to overestimate the degraded environments, and slightly underestimates those in better conditions ( Figure 5 a and b). The same was observed by Fore et al. (1994) FORE, L.S., KARR, J.R. and CONQUEST, L.L. Statistical properties of an index of Biological Integrity used to evaluate Water Resources. Canadian Journal of Aquatic Fisheries Sciences, 1994, 51(5), 1077-1087. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/f94-107.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/f94-107 ...
. It may be explained considering that all the metric values within the interval defined by discrete trisection receive the same score (1 or 3 or 5) independently of the observed value. It diminishes the accuracy of the final index conferring the typical format of “stair step” to the index distribution.

Figure 5
Comparison between standardized continuous and discrete scoring for RFAI-N (A) and RFAI-W (B).

Comparing the indices obtained from fish abundance and weight, the RFAI-W appeared more sensitive in detecting the fish assemblage conditions, mainly in degraded environments, as in Barra Bonita reservoir. In fact, the fish assemblage at Barra Bonita reservoir is dominated by r-strategist species, opportunistic, small body-size and with fast reproductive compensation, hardly contributing to the biomass of the system ( Petesse et al., 2007 PETESSE, M.L., PETRERE, M. and SPIGOLON, R.J. Adaptation of the Reservoir Fish Assemblage Index (RFAI) for assessing the Barra Bonita Reservoir (São Paulo, Brazil). River Research and Applications, 2007, 23(6), 595-612. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/rra.1001.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/rra.1001 ...
).

8. Perspectives for the Use of Fish-Based Multimetric Indices in Brazil

Brazil presents approximately 2300 species of freshwater fish corresponding to the 55% of the Neotropical fish species region ( Buckup et al., 2007 BUCKUP, P.A., MENEZES, N.A. and GHAZZI, M.S. Catálogo das espécies de peixes de água doce do Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Museu Nacional, 2007. ). New species are described every year indicating that the entire fish' biodiversity is still unknown. Therefore, studies on fish species taxonomy, biology, and ecology (composition, abundance, biomass, trophic category, age classes, migratory habit, reproductive strategy, vulnerability and resilience) must be encouraged. The higher the level of knowledge about species traits, higher will be the possibility to identify metrics that better respond to degradation. It allows the improvement of index performance, and the best discrimination of degradation causes.

The second issue for the future perspective of biomonitoring programs is related to technical-operational aspects aiming the optimization of time and costs. In this sense, substantial efforts may be addressed to field sampling protocol homogenization, standardization of sampling methodology, as well as professional trainings, and data processing techniques. These aspects are also essential for sharing data from different river basins, monitoring agencies and states.

Another issue is the definition of clear recovery targets for the artificial environment. This means classify reservoirs in homogeneous groups, but this is not easy because of their peculiar characteristics as location, morphology, size, hydraulic management, trophic state, etc. In addition, many reservoirs in the southeast of Brazil are cascade systems, so the conditions of upstream reservoir affect the conditions of downstream ones complicating the comparisons between systems in the same ecoregion.

Finally, Ruaro & Gubiani (2013 RUARO, R. and GUBIANI, E.A. A scientometric assessment of 30 years of the Index of Biotic Integrity in aquatic ecosystems: applications and main flaws. Ecological Indicators , 2013, 29, 105-110. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2012.12.016.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.201...
) shows that the evolution of biomonitoring tools only occurred after the approval of specific regulations in this sense. In Brazil, biomonitoring is not mandatory, and the applications of the multimetric approach for environmental diagnosis is still restrict. In fact, only the State of Minas Gerais introduced the classification of freshwater environments based on the “ecological integrity” (Resolution COPAM / CERH-MG No. 001/2008), showing the validity of the approach. Thus, we expect its incorporation in official biomonitoring programs in all Brazil states, and the definition of clear recovering objective for artificial environments.

Acknowledgements

The research Petesse et al. (2014) PETESSE, M.L., PETRERE JUNIOR, M. and AGOSTINHO, Â.A. Defining a fish bio-assessment tool to monitoring the biological condition of a cascade reservoirs system in tropical area. Ecological Engineering, 2014, 69, 139-150. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.2014.03.070.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.201...
was supported by FAPESP (Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo), grant n. 07/50985-2, inserted in Thematic Project (n. 07/50981-7) “Ecologia de Represas”–UNESP, allocated to Professor M. Petrere Jr. and Professor A.A. Agostinho. The author thanks CAPES (Coordenção de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior) for the PNDP (Programa Nacional de Pós Doutorado) grant. Thank to the anonymous reviewers whose suggestions contributed to the improvement of this manuscript.

  • Cite as: Petesse, M.L. Study approach and step by step development of a fish-based multimetric index for reservoirs: a case study presentation from a neotropical cascade system. Acta Limnologica Brasiliensia, 2018, vol. 30, e305.

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    14 Nov 2018
  • Date of issue
    2018

History

  • Received
    13 Dec 2017
  • Accepted
    03 Oct 2018
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