Fish biodiversity and community structure of the Okpara stream, Oueme River, Benin, West Africa: Risk of high predation and food-web alteration
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Abstract
Despite their economic and commercial importance for grassroots,
and the high degradation pressure of their habitat, the fishes of most
African riverine ecosystems are unknown. The current study aimed to
document the diversity and community structure of the Okpara stream
(Oueme River) fishes in order to contribute for habitat protection, speciesconservation and valorization. From December 2015 to May 2017, fish
samplings were made monthly on five collecting sites with gill net, hooks
and cast net. Overall, 53 fish species belonging to 30 genera and 14
families were inventoried with Mormyridae (9 species) and Cichlidae (8
species) the most speciose taxa. Numerically, 15 species aggregating
92.14% dominated the fish community with Hemichromis fasciatus
(29.20%), the most dominant species. The high abundance of
Hemichromis fasciatus, a top piscivorous cichlid, suggested a high
predation that may affect the food web and the ecosystem balance. The
multiple degradation factors recorded require a holistic management
scheme including ecotoxicological studies, water hyacinth biocontrol,
habitat protection, species conservation / valorization and ecosystem
follow-up.
