Abstract The effects of dams closure and floodplain forest removal on diet and body condition of a frugivorous migratory fish from the Amazon were evaluated herein. Fish were captured with gillnets in two different environmental conditions: before and after the construction of the Santo Antonio reservoir in Madeira River, preceded by clearing of floodplain forest to mitigate the effects of eutrophication into the run-of-river dam. A total of 493 Mylossoma duriventre specimens were accessed and showed a strong shift in diet while body condition did not change after reservoir formation. The vegan diet based on fruits and seed was associated to Mylossoma duriventre prior to damming, and replaced by a carnivorous one, mainly based on insects. Our results suggest that dietary plasticity has guaranteed its body condition, at least in the first two years after damming. Cutting off floodplain forest to avoid eutrophication has immediate and direct impacts upon the supply of fruits and seeds for Mylossoma duriventre. Still, substitution with insectivorous diet over a frugivorous one, as observed for Mylossoma duriventre, may conceal an underlying problem of decreasing the local ichthyochory and floodplain forest maintenance or restoration of varzea areas over the time.
Flipped reducetarianism: A vegan fish subordinated to carnivory by suppression of the flooded forest in the Amazon
Taís Melo,Gislene Torrente‐Vilara,C. Röpke
Published 2019 in Forest Ecology and Management
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- Publication year
2019
- Venue
Forest Ecology and Management
- Publication date
2019-03-01
- Fields of study
Biology, Environmental Science
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Semantic Scholar
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