1. Approaches and research needs for advancing the protection and recovery of imperilled freshwater fishes and mussels in Canada
- Author
-
Castaneda, Rowshyra A., Ackerman, Josef D., Chapman, Lauren J., Cooke, Steven J., Cuddington, Kim, Dextrase, Alan J., Jackson, Donald A., Koops, Marten A., Krkosek, Martin, Loftus, Kevin K., Mandrak, Nicholas E., Martel, Andre L., Molnar, Peter K., Morris, Todd J., Pitcher, Trevor E., Poesch, Mark S., Power, Michael, Pratt, Thomas C., Reid, Scott M., Rodriguez, Marco A., Rosenfeld, Jordan, Wilson, Chris C., Zanatta, David T., and Drake, D. Andrew R.
- Subjects
Fishes, Fresh-water -- Protection and preservation -- Environmental aspects ,Wildlife conservation -- Methods ,Mussels, Fresh-water -- Environmental aspects -- Protection and preservation ,Earth sciences - Abstract
Effective conservation requires that species recovery measures are informed by rigorous scientific research. For imperilled freshwater fishes and mussels in Canada, numerous research gaps exist, in part owing to the need for specialized research methods. The Canadian Freshwater Species at Risk Research Network (SARNET) was formed and identified or implemented approaches to address current research gaps, including (1) captive experimental research populations, (2) nonlethal methods for estimating abundance and distribution, (3) nonlethal field methods to measure life-history parameters, (4) species distribution models informed by co-occurring species, (5) conservation physiology to inform habitat and threat science, (6) evidence syntheses to evaluate threats and recovery measures, (7) disease-transmission models to understand mussel-host relationships, (8) experimental mesocosms and manipulative experiments to evaluate key habitat stressors, (9) threat and hazard models for predictive applications, and (10) rigorous evaluation of surrogate species. Over a dozen threat- and recovery-focused SARNET research applications are summarized, demonstrating the value of a coordinated research program between academics and government to advance scientific research on, and to support the recovery of, imperilled freshwater species. Des mesures de retablissement reposant sur des travaux de recherche scientifique rigoureux sont necessaires a une conservation efficace. Pour les especes de poissons d'eau douce et mulettes en peril au Canada, il existe de nombreuses lacunes dans la recherche, dues partiellement a la necessite de methodes de recherche specialisees. Le reseau canadien de recherche sur les especes d'eau douce en peril (SARNET) a ete cree et il a cerne ou applique differentes approches visant a combler ces lacunes, dont les suivantes : (1) des populations experimentales captives de recherche, (2) des methodes non letales d'estimation de l'abondance et de la repartition, (3) des methodes de terrain non letales de mesure de parametres du cycle biologique, (4) des modeles de repartition des especes integrant des donnees sur les especes cooccurrentes, (5) la physiologie de la conservation pour soutenir les travaux scientifiques sur les habitats et les menaces, (6) des syntheses de donnees probantes pour evaluer les menaces et measures de retablissement, (7) des modeles de transmission des maladies pour comprendre les relations mulettes-hotes, (8) des mesocosmes experimentaux et des experiences de manipulation pour evaluer des facteurs de stress cles des habitats, (9) des modeles de menaces et de dangers pour des applications predictives et (10) Revaluation rigoureuse d'especes substitutives. Un resume de plus d'une douzaine d'applications des travaux de recherche du SARNET axees sur les menaces et le retablissement est presente, qui demontre l'utilite d'un programme de recherche au sein duquel les travaux de chercheurs universitaires et gouvernementaux sont coordonnes afin de faire avancer la recherche scientifique sur les especes d'eau douce en peril et soutenir leur retablissement. [Traduit par la Redaction], Introduction An important goal of conservation biology is to prevent species extinctions caused by human activity (Soule 1985). When populations decline and become imperilled, various recovery measures are often enacted [...]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF