Milčanović, Vukašin

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Effects of run‐of‐river hydropower plants on fish communities in montane stream ecosystems in Serbia

Simonović, Predrag; Ristić, Ratko; Milčanović, Vukašin; Polovina, Siniša; Malušević, Ivan; Radić, Boris; Kanjuh, Tamara; Marić, Ana; Nikolić, Vera

(John Wiley and Sons Ltd, 2021)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Simonović, Predrag
AU  - Ristić, Ratko
AU  - Milčanović, Vukašin
AU  - Polovina, Siniša
AU  - Malušević, Ivan
AU  - Radić, Boris
AU  - Kanjuh, Tamara
AU  - Marić, Ana
AU  - Nikolić, Vera
PY  - 2021
UR  - https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/rra.3795
UR  - https://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4212
AB  - Small run-of-river hydropower plants (RRHPs) have revealed strong harmful effects worldwide on stream habitats (e.g., fragmentation and destruction) and decreased fish species, especially anadromous species abundance. Recently, RRHPs have rapidly been installed in Serbia. Most were installed on montane streams because their steep slopes are most convenient for hydropower energy production at minimal costs. Brown trout Salmo trutta are prominent in the fish communities of this rarest type of aquatic ecosystems. Their native molecular diversity reflects a biodiversity hotspot in the Balkans, and they provide attractive fishing opportunities. Records from fishery management plans for highland stream fisheries where RRHPs were installed revealed reduced brown trout biomass compared with streams without RRHPs. Research on six streams with operational RRHPs revealed severe deterioration of habitat, for example, increased water temperature, reduced dissolved oxygen, and increased nutrient contents. Effects on fish communities were evident from a change in their structure. Resident, stream-dwelling brown trout were the most affected species with steep declines in abundance, biomass, and productivity. Fragmentation owing to damming was also reflected by deterioration of their age structure. Unique native brown trout stocks susceptible to adverse effects are difficult to restore by stocking, and fish passages commonly supplied as compensation to overcome the disruption of habitats cannot mitigate the threat posed to the fish.
PB  - John Wiley and Sons Ltd
T2  - River Research and Applications
T1  - Effects of run‐of‐river hydropower plants on fish communities in montane stream ecosystems in Serbia
DO  - 10.1002/rra.3795
SP  - rra.3795
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Simonović, Predrag and Ristić, Ratko and Milčanović, Vukašin and Polovina, Siniša and Malušević, Ivan and Radić, Boris and Kanjuh, Tamara and Marić, Ana and Nikolić, Vera",
year = "2021",
abstract = "Small run-of-river hydropower plants (RRHPs) have revealed strong harmful effects worldwide on stream habitats (e.g., fragmentation and destruction) and decreased fish species, especially anadromous species abundance. Recently, RRHPs have rapidly been installed in Serbia. Most were installed on montane streams because their steep slopes are most convenient for hydropower energy production at minimal costs. Brown trout Salmo trutta are prominent in the fish communities of this rarest type of aquatic ecosystems. Their native molecular diversity reflects a biodiversity hotspot in the Balkans, and they provide attractive fishing opportunities. Records from fishery management plans for highland stream fisheries where RRHPs were installed revealed reduced brown trout biomass compared with streams without RRHPs. Research on six streams with operational RRHPs revealed severe deterioration of habitat, for example, increased water temperature, reduced dissolved oxygen, and increased nutrient contents. Effects on fish communities were evident from a change in their structure. Resident, stream-dwelling brown trout were the most affected species with steep declines in abundance, biomass, and productivity. Fragmentation owing to damming was also reflected by deterioration of their age structure. Unique native brown trout stocks susceptible to adverse effects are difficult to restore by stocking, and fish passages commonly supplied as compensation to overcome the disruption of habitats cannot mitigate the threat posed to the fish.",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Ltd",
journal = "River Research and Applications",
title = "Effects of run‐of‐river hydropower plants on fish communities in montane stream ecosystems in Serbia",
doi = "10.1002/rra.3795",
pages = "rra.3795"
}
Simonović, P., Ristić, R., Milčanović, V., Polovina, S., Malušević, I., Radić, B., Kanjuh, T., Marić, A.,& Nikolić, V.. (2021). Effects of run‐of‐river hydropower plants on fish communities in montane stream ecosystems in Serbia. in River Research and Applications
John Wiley and Sons Ltd., rra.3795.
https://doi.org/10.1002/rra.3795
Simonović P, Ristić R, Milčanović V, Polovina S, Malušević I, Radić B, Kanjuh T, Marić A, Nikolić V. Effects of run‐of‐river hydropower plants on fish communities in montane stream ecosystems in Serbia. in River Research and Applications. 2021;:rra.3795.
doi:10.1002/rra.3795 .
Simonović, Predrag, Ristić, Ratko, Milčanović, Vukašin, Polovina, Siniša, Malušević, Ivan, Radić, Boris, Kanjuh, Tamara, Marić, Ana, Nikolić, Vera, "Effects of run‐of‐river hydropower plants on fish communities in montane stream ecosystems in Serbia" in River Research and Applications (2021):rra.3795,
https://doi.org/10.1002/rra.3795 . .
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