Diversity, distribution and community composition of fish in perialpine lakes – “ Projet Lac ” synthesis report
Author
Alexander, Timothy
Author
Seehausen, Ole
Eawag: Das Wasserforschungsinstitut des ETH-Bereichs Überlandstrasse 133, CH- 8600 Dübendorf
text
2021
2021-11-12
Eawag: Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology
https://www.dora.lib4ri.ch/eawag/islandora/object/eawag:24051
book
http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5779569
723c8018-f87a-440a-bed1-3d2fe2a46e42
978-3-906484-76-1
5779569
Rutilus
spp
(roach and related species)
Three species of
Rutilus
were recorded by Projet Lac in the perialpine lakes: common roach (
Rutilus rutilus
) is native to the Rhine and Rhone catchments and most of Europe (excluding Italian and Iberian peninsulas and Mediterranean drainages of the Balkan peninsula), while triotto (R. aula) and pigo (
R. pigus
) are native and endemic to the northern Adriatic basin, mainly the Po catchment (
Figure 34
).
Rutilus rutilus
was one of the most common species in Projet Lac, recorded in all northern perialpine lakes.This species was also recorded in a large number of fishing actions within each lake. Usually restricted to the littoral zone,
R. rutilus
also dominated the open water, pelagic zone of some smaller lakes: Remoray, Hallwil, Morat and Brenet.
R. rutilus
populations in the two most pristine oligotrophic lakes, Lake Brienz and Lake Walen, are genetically and – in the case of Lake Brienz – also phenotypically distinct from
Rutilus
in the other northern pre-alpine lakes
[145]
. Additionally, within Lake Brienz, fish from rocky boulder and cobble habitats are phenotypically distinct from those living over any other substrate
type
(;
Figure 35
). We consider these to be different roach populations of high conservation priority. That
Rutilus
from more heavily impacted lakes geographically as distant as Lakes Geneva, Neuchatel and Hallwill are genetically more similar to each other than to those from Lakes Brienz and Walen may imply that
Rutilus
populations have lost parts of their distinctiveness in the course of ecosystem perturbation and stock transfer. In several Rhine lakes we also recorded intergeneric hybrids between
Rutilus rutilus
and
Abramis brama
(
Figure 34
).