Skip to main content

Advertisement

Log in

Urban impacts on tropical island streams: Some key aspects influencing ecosystem response

  • Published:
Urban Ecosystems Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

Improving our understanding of the impacts of urbanization on tropical island streams is critical as urbanization becomes a dominant feature in tropical areas. Although the “urban stream syndrome” has been successful in summarizing urban impacts on streams, the response of some island streams is different to that expected. Here we review available information on urban impacts to tropical island streams and describe unique responses to urbanization. We identified three key aspects that play particularly important or unique roles in determining tropical-island stream integrity: biotic response to water pollution, movement barriers along the stream network, and altered geomorphology that results in habitat loss. As expected, water pollution negatively impacts stream ecosystems in tropical islands and in some regions impacts can be severe, as untreated wastewaters are directly discharged into streams. While aquatic insects show the expected responses to pollution, other native fauna (e.g., shrimps and fishes) appear to be less impacted by moderate levels of pollution. Movement barriers along the stream network are especially important as much of the tropical island fauna have diadromous (either amphidromous or catadromous) life histories. Most native freshwater mollusks, shrimps, and fishes inhabiting tropical islands are diadromous and depend on unimpeded connections between freshwater and marine environments to complete their life cycles. The presence of these species in urban streams is best explained by longitudinal connectivity rather than by the degree of urban impact. Finally, in streams that remain connected to marine environments, the presence of native shrimps and fishes is strongly related to the physical habitat. Fish assemblages in channelized and severely altered stream reaches are almost completely devoid of native fauna and tend to be dominated by non-native species. In contrast, relatively diverse shrimp and fish assemblages can be found in reaches that retain their physical habitat complexity, even when they are impacted by urbanization. Our understanding of urban impacts on tropical island streams remains limited. However, the identification of key aspects can help us better understand urban impacts on streams in tropical islands, and best focus our management and research efforts to protect these unique ecosystems.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Allan JD, Castillo MM (2007) Stream Ecology: Structure and function of running waters. Springer, The Netherlands

    Google Scholar 

  • Arthington AH, Bunn SE, Poff NL, Naiman RJ (2006) The challenge of providing environmental flow rules to sustain river ecosystems. Ecological Applications 16:1311–1318

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Bass D (2003) A comparison of freshwater macroinvertebrate communities on small Caribbean islands. Bioscience 53:1094–1100

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Benstead JP, March JG, Pringle CM, Scatena FN (1999) Effects of a low-head dam and water abstraction on migratory tropical stream biota. Ecological Applications 9:656–668

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Blanco JF, Scatena FN (2005) Floods, habitat hydraulics and upstream migration of Neritina virginea (Gastropoda: Neritidae) in Northeastern Puerto Rico. Caribbean Journal of Science 41:55–74

    Google Scholar 

  • Blanco JF, Scatena FN (2006) Hierarchical contribution of river-ocean connectivity, water chemistry, hydraulics and substrate to the distribution of diadromous snails in Puerto Rico streams. Journal of the North American Benthological Society 25:82–98, Blanco and Scatena, 2005

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Brasher AMD (2003) Impacts of human disturbances on biotic communities in Hawaiian streams. Bioscience 53:1052–1060

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Brasher AMD, Wolff RH, Luton CD (2004) Associations among land use, habitat characteristics, and invertebrate community structure in nine streams on the island of Oahu, Hawaii. United States Geological Survey Water Resources Investigations Report 03–4256

  • Brooker MP (1985) The ecological effects of channelization. The Geographical Journal 151:63–69

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Chadwick MA, Dobberfuhl DR, Benke AC, Huryn A, Thiele JE (2006) Urbanization affects stream ecosystem function by altering hydrology, chemistry, and biotic richness. Ecological Applications 16:1796–1807

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Chubb AL, Zink RM, Fitzsimons JM (1998) Patterns of mtDNA variation in Hawaiian freshwater fishes: the phylogeographic consequences of amphidromy. Journal of Heredity 89:8–16

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Cohen J (2008) Pipe dreams come true. Science 319:745–746

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Concepcion GB, Nelson SG (1999) Effects of a dam and reservoir on the distributions and densities of macrofauna in tropical streams of Guam (Mariana Islands). Journal of Freshwater Ecology 14:447–454

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Cook BD, Bernays S, Pringle CM, Hughes JM (2009) Marine dispersal determines the genetic population structure of migratory stream fauna of Puerto Rico: evidence for island-scale population recovery processes. Journal of the North American Benthological Society 28:709–718

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Covich AP, Crowl TA, Johnson SL, Pyron M (1996) Distribution and abundance of tropical freshwater shrimp along a stream corridor: response to disturbance. Biotropica 28:484–492

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Crook KE, Pringle CM, Freeman MC (2009) A method to assess longitudinal riverine connectivity in tropical streams dominated by migratory biota. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 19:714–723

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Cross WF, Covich AP, Crowl TA, Benstead JP, Ramírez A (2008) Secondary production, longevity and resource consumption rates of freshwater shrimps in two tropical streams with contrasting geomorphology and food web structure. Freshwater Biology 53:2504–2519

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • De Jesús-Crespo R, Ramírez A (2011) Effects of urbanization on stream physicochemistry and macroinvertebrate assemblages in a tropical urban watershed in Puerto Rico. Journal of the North American Benthological Society 30:739–750

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Englund RA, Wright MG, Polhemus DA (2007) Aquatic insect taxa as indicators of aquatic species richness, habitat disturbance, and invasive species impacts in Hawaiian streams. In Evenhuis NL, Fitzsimons JM (eds) Biology of Hawaiian streams and estuaries. Bishop Museum Bulletin in Cultural and Environmental Studies 3:207–232

  • Engman AC, (2011) Fish assemblage structure in urban streams of Puerto Rico: the importance of reach- and catchment-scale abiotic factors. Master thesis, University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras campus

  • Falkland AC (1992) Small tropical islands: water resources of paradise lost, UNESCO

  • Fièvet E (1999) An experimental survey of freshwater shrimp upstream migration in an impounded stream of Guadeloupe Island, Lesser Antilles. Archiv für Hydrobiologie 144:339–355

    Google Scholar 

  • Fitzsimons JM, Nishimoto RT, Devick WS (1996) Maintaining biodiversity in freshwater ecosystems on oceanic islands of the tropical pacific. Chinese Biodiversity 4:23–27

    Google Scholar 

  • Fitzsimons JM, Parham JE, Nishimoto RT (2002) Similarities in behavioral ecology among amphidromous and catadromous fishes on the oceanic islands of Hawai’i and Guam. Fisheries 123–129

  • Ford JI, Kinzie RA III (1982) Life Crawls Upstream. Natural History 91:61–66

    Google Scholar 

  • Freeman M, Pringle CM, Greathouse E, Freeman B (2003) Ecosystem-level consequences of migratory faunal depletion caused by dams. In Biodiversity and Conservation of Shads Worldwide, Limburg KE, Waldman JR (eds). American Fisheries Society Series. American Fisheries Society Symposium 35:255–266

  • Grau HR, Aide TM, Zimmerman JK, Thomlinson JR, Helmer E, Zou X (2003) The ecological consequences of socioeconomic and land-use changes in post-agriculture Puerto Rico. Bioscience 53:1159–1168

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Greathouse EA, Pringle CM, McDowell WH (2006) Conservation and management of migratory fauna: dams in tropical streams of Puerto Rico. Aquatic Conservation 16:695–712

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Gupta A (1995) Magnitude, frequency, and special factors affecting channel form and processes in the seasonal tropics. In: Costa JE, Miller AJ, Potter KW, Wilcock PR (eds) Natural and anthropogenic influences in fluvial geomorphology. American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, pp 125–136

    Chapter  Google Scholar 

  • Hein CL, Pike AS, Blanco JF, Covich AP, Scatena FN, Hawkins CP, Crowl TA (2011) Effects of coupled natural and anthropogenic factors on the community structure of diadromous fish and shrimp species in tropical island streams. Freshwater Biology 56:1002–1015

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Holmquist JG, Schmidt-Gengenbach JM, Yoshioka BB (1998) High dams and marine-freshwater linkages: effects on native and introduced fauna in the Caribbean. Conservation Biology 12:621–630

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Joy MK, Death RG (2001) Control of freshwater fish and crayfish community structure in Taranaki, New Zealand: dams, diadromy or habitat structure? Freshwater Biology 46:417–429

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Keith P (2003) Biology and ecology of amphidromous Gobiidae of the Indo-Pacific and the Caribbean regions. Journal of Fish Biology 63:831–847

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Kwai Sim L, Balamurugan G (1991) Urbanization and urban water problems in southeast Asia a case of unsustainable development. Journal of Environmental Management 32:195–209

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Kwak TJ, Cooney PB, Brown CH (2007) Fishery population and habitat assessment in Puerto Rico streams: phase 1 final report. San Juan, Federal Aid in Sport Fish Restoration, Final Report, Submitted to the Department of Natural and Environmental Resources

  • Luton CD, Brasher AMD, Durkin DC, Little P (2005) Larval drift of amphidromous shrimp and gobies on the island of Oahu, Hawai’i. Micronesica 38:1–16

    Google Scholar 

  • Maksimovic C, Todorovic Z, Braga BPF (1993) Urban drainage problems in the humid tropics. International Association of Hydrological Sciences, Publication 216

  • March JG, Benstead JP, Pringle CM, Scatena FN (2003) Damming tropical island streams: problems, solutions, and alternatives. Bioscience 53:1069–1078

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • McDowall RM (2004) Ancestry and amphidromy in island freshwater fish faunas. Fish and Fisheries 5:75–85

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • McDowall RM (2007) On amphidromy, a distinct form of diadromy in aquatic organisms. Fish and Fisheries 8:1–13

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • McDowall RM (2009) Why be amphidromous: expatrial dispersal and the place of source and sink population dynamics? Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries 20:87–100

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • McDowall RM (2010a) Why be amphidromous: expatrial dispersal and the place of source and sink population dynamics? Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries 20:87–100

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • McDowall RM (2010b) New Zealand freshwater fishes: an historical and ecological biogeography. Springer

  • Meyer JL, Paul MJ, Taulbee WK (2005) Stream ecosystem function in urbanizing landscapes. Journal of the North American Benthological Society 24:602–612

    Google Scholar 

  • Miya Y, Hamano T (1988) The influence of a dam having no fishway on the distribution of decapods crustaceans in the Yukinoura River, Nagasaki, Japan. Nippon Suisan Gakkaishi 54:429–435

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Montgomery MR (2008) The urban transformation of the developing world. Science 319:761–764

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Moulton TP, Wantzen KM (2006) Conservation of tropical streams - special questions or conventional paradigms? Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 16:659–663

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Norton S, Timbol AS, Parrish JD (1978) Stream channel modification in Hawaii, Part B: Effect of channelization on the distribution and abundance of fauna in selected streams. Columbia (MO): US Fish and Wildlife Service, Nation Stream Alteration Team. FWS/OBS–78/17

  • Onoda Y (2009) The relative importance of substrate conditions as microhabitat determinants of a riverine benthic goby, Rhinogobius sp. OR (orange form) in runs. Limnology 10:57–61

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Paul MJ, Meyer JL (2001) Streams in the urban landscape. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 32:333–365

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Perez-Reyes O (1999) Abundance, diversity and life histories of freshwater decapods in Puerto Rico. Master thesis, University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras campus, San Juan, Puerto Rico

  • Pringle CM (1996) Atyid shrimps (Decapoda: Atyidae) influence the spatial heterogeneity of algal communities over different scales in tropical montane streams, Puerto Rico. Freshwater Biology 35:125–140

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Pringle CM (1997) Exploring how disturbance is transmitted upstream: going against the flow. Journal of the North American Benthological Society 16:425–438

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Pringle CM, Blake GA (1994) Quantitative effects of atyid shrimps (Decapoda: Atyidae) on the depositional environment in a tropical stream: use of electricity for experimental exclusion. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 51:1443–1450

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Pringle CM, Scatena FN, Paaby-Hansen P, Nuñez-Ferrera M (2000) River conservation in Latin America and the Caribbean. In: Boon PJ, Petts GE (eds) Global perspectives on river conservation: science, policy and practice. Wiley, London, pp 39–75

    Google Scholar 

  • Ramírez A, Pringle CM, Wantzen KM (2008) Tropical river conservation. In: Dudgeon D (ed) Tropical stream ecology. Elsevier Science, London, pp 285–304

    Chapter  Google Scholar 

  • Ramírez A, De Jesus-Crespo R, Martinó-Cardona DM, Martinez-Rivera N, Burgos-Caraballo S (2009) Urban streams in Puerto Rico: what can we learn from the tropics? Journal of the North American Benthological Society 28:1070–1079

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Resh VH (2005) Stream crossings and the conservation of diadromous invertebrates in South Pacific island streams. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 15:313–317

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Roy AH, Rosemond AD, Paul MJ, Leigh DS, Wallace JB (2003) Stream macroinvertebrate response to catchment urbanisation (Georgia, U.S.A.). Freshwater Biology 48:329–346

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Ryan PA (1991) The success of Gobiidae in the tropical Pacific insular streams. New Zealand Journal of Zoology 18:25–30

    Google Scholar 

  • Smith GC, Covich AP, Brasher AMD (2003) An ecological perspective on the biodiversity of Tropical Island streams. Bioscience 53:1048–1051

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Strong E, Gargominy O, Ponder W, Bouchet P (2008) Global diversity of gastropods (Gastropoda; Mollusca) in freshwater. Hydrobiologia 595:149–166

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Taginuchi Y, Inoue M, Kawaguchi Y (2001) Stream fish habitat science and management in Japan: a review. Aquatic Ecosystem Health and Management Society 4:357–365

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Te Aroha A (2009) Restoring giant kokopu (Galaxias argenteus) populations in Hamilton’s urban streams. Master thesis, The University of Waikato

  • Timbol AS, Maciolek JA (1978) Stream channel modification in Hawaii, Part A: Statewide inventory of streams, habitat factors and associated Biota. Columbia (MO): US Fish and Wildlife Service, National Stream Alteration Team. FWS/OBS-78/16

  • Villamil J, Clements RG (1976) Some aspects of the ecology of freshwater shrimps in the upper Espíritu Santo river at El Verde, Puerto Rico. Puerto Rico Nuclear Center, University of Puerto Rico, San Juan Puerto Rico (United States Energy Research and Development Administration). Publication 206:1–62

    Google Scholar 

  • Vitousek PM (1988) Diversity and biological invasions of oceanic islands. In: Wilson EO, Peter FM (eds) Biodiversity. National Academy Press, Washington, DC, pp 181–192

    Google Scholar 

  • Walsh CJ, Roy AH, Feminella JW, Cottingham PD, Groffman PM, Morgan RP (2005) The urban stream syndrome: current knowledge and the search for a cure. Journal of the North American Benthological Society 24:706–723

    Google Scholar 

  • Wenger SJ, Roy AH, Jackson CR, Bernhardt ES, Carter TL, Filoso S, Gibson CA, Hession WC, Kaushal SS, Marti E, Meyer JL, Palmer MA, Paul MJ, Purcell AH, Ramírez A, Rosemond AD, Schofield KA, Sudduth EB, Walsh CJ (2009) Twenty-six key research questions in urban stream ecology: an assessment of the state of the science. Journal of the North American Benthological Society 28:1080–1098

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Winemiller KO, Ponwith BJ (1998) Comparative ecology of eleotrid fishes in Central American coastal streams. Environmental Biology of Fishes 53:373–384

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Zink RM, Fitzsimons JM, Dittmann DL, Reynolds DR, Nishimoto RT (1996) Evolutionary genetics of Hawaiian freshwater fish. Copeia 2:330–335

    Article  Google Scholar 

Download references

Acknowledgements

We thank Chip Small, Seth Wenger and an anonymous reviewer for their comments on the manuscript. We also appreciate help by Sue Engman in editing the manuscript. Our urban stream research in Puerto Rico is part of the Luquillo Long-Term Ecological Research program (NSF DEB-0620910) and the San Juan ULTRA program (NSF 0948507).

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Alonso Ramírez.

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Ramírez, A., Engman, A., Rosas, K.G. et al. Urban impacts on tropical island streams: Some key aspects influencing ecosystem response. Urban Ecosyst 15, 315–325 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11252-011-0214-3

Download citation

  • Published:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11252-011-0214-3

Keywords

Navigation