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Relation of fish community composition to environmental and land use factors in part of the Upper Mississippi River Basin, 1995-97

January 1, 1999

Fish communities in the Upper Mississippi River Basin have been affected by changing environmental and land-use factors. Fish communities in small streams in agricultural and urban basins were compared to the fish community in a relatively undisturbed forested basin. In small streams, nutrient inputs from fertilizer, habitat modification from channelization, hydrologic modification from dams and tile drains, and increased water temperatures from loss of riparian shading have contributed to producing a change in fish community composition. In the large rivers, some of the changes that have occurred from sites upstream to downstream of the Twin Cities metropolitan area are primarily caused by the environmental effects of dams constructed as part of the lock and dam commercial navigation system. Although some of the differences upstream and downstream of the Twin Cities metropolitan area are due to zoogeographic variability, the major changes in the downstream community are shifts to more lentic species, species with higher thermal tolerance, and more planktivorous species. These changes are an extension of the changes observed in the small streams due to increased nutrients, increased water temperatures, and habitat alteration.

Publication Year 1999
Title Relation of fish community composition to environmental and land use factors in part of the Upper Mississippi River Basin, 1995-97
DOI 10.3133/wri994034
Authors R. M. Goldstein, K. E. Lee, P. J. Talmage, J. C. Stauffer, J. P. Anderson
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Series Title Water-Resources Investigations Report
Series Number 99-4034
Index ID wri994034
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Minnesota Water Science Center