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result(s) for
"Virbickas, Tomas"
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Impacts of low-head hydropower plants on cyprinid-dominated fish assemblages in Lithuanian rivers
2020
The meso-scale habitat simulation model MesoHABSIM was applied in three Lithuanian lowland rivers to study the effect of low-head hydropower plants (HPPs) on the fish habitats. Stream flow time series on a daily scale for the period 1970–2015 were used to describe flow regime downstream of HPPs for periods before and after their installation. Conditional habitat suitability criteria were developed for 4 species of cyprinid fish, schneider (
Alburnoides bipunctatus
), dace (
Leuciscus leuciscus
), roach (
Rutilus rutilus
) and vimba (
Vimba vimba
) to simulate their available habitat at different water discharges. Modelling results showed that HPPs have a significant impact on habitat availability in the low flow period in dry years below HPPs due to insufficient released flow. The environmental flow, as prescribed by the Lithuanian national law, is estimated between 80 and 95% exceedance probability of the mean minimum discharge of 30 days. This flow leads to a significant reduction in frequency and duration of available suitable habitats for vimba and schneider during low flow period. The roach habitat is the least affected. The results of habitat modelling are in line with the actual data on the occurrence and relative abundance of considered fish species in the studied river stretches. A general comparison of the relative abundance of modelled fish species in 42 natural river stretches and 20 stretches below the HPPs also showed that the relative abundance of roach is significantly higher, and that of schneider is significantly lower in river sections below the HPPs than the abundance in natural river sections. All results indicate that the current environmental flow does not secure survival of certain fish species. The applicability of the average low flow release during summer could be a plausible alternative to the current environmental flow in order to maintain ecosystem health and services.
Journal Article
Prioritisation of Barriers According to Their Impact on Migratory Fish in the Lowland River Basin District
by
Virbickas, Tomas
,
Kesminas, Vytautas
in
Anthropogenic factors
,
barrier prioritisation
,
barriers to migration
2024
Artificial barriers are one of the most damaging anthropogenic factors, but are also socio-economic constructions, so the decision between removing a barrier and installing a fishway must be justified. The aim was to develop a system to quantify the amount of suitable habitat for migratory fish above barriers, to assess barriers’ passability, to prioritise them in current and historical terms and to take into account the impact of the reservoir in the selection of barrier management alternatives. For this purpose, the proportion of suitable area and the potential number of spawners were calculated separately for the flooded and free-flowing river sections above the barrier. The effect of the flooded area and fishway efficiency on the potential number of individuals was assessed and the historical importance of the areas above each barrier was evaluated. The results show that the proportion of suitable area in the total area above the barriers varies between 5 and 31%. Short river stretches of high habitat quality have a higher reproductive potential than much longer stretches of lower habitat quality. Dams with fishways can still be among the most negatively impacting barriers if they are located in the migration route of fish into a large part of the basin.
Journal Article
Lake minnow, Rhynchocypris percnurus (Actinopterygii, Cypriniformes, Leuciscidae), in Lithuanian inland waters: Distribution and current population state
by
Virbickas, Tomas
,
Steponėnas, Andrius
,
Wolnicki, Jacek
in
Endangered species
,
Extinction (Biology)
,
Fishes
2025
The endangered lake minnow, Rhynchocypris percnurus (Pallas, 1814), has been known from Lithuanian inland waters for over 20 years, but we have a very limited understanding of its current population size. The main purpose of this study was to provide a concise account of the species in Lithuania, including a rough assessment of threats to its populations and habitats. In 2018–2019, we investigated 360 small water bodies across the country, all of which were potentially suitable for lake minnows. Results revealed that lake minnows were present in only 12 water bodies, all concentrated in one regional park in the southern part of the country. However, by 2024 the species had gone extinct at nine of these sites due to habitat loss. At present (2025), only one viable Lithuanian population of this species can be considered to exist. Our results conclusively show that the species is on the very edge of extinction. Urgent action is needed to protect this species in Lithuanian waters, with special emphasis on revitalizing its most suitable habitats and translocating fish from the only currently known population in Lithuania.
Journal Article
Immediate and delayed impacts of Alizarin Red S dye on Salmo trutta fry: Physiological and fitness responses
by
Virbickas, Tomas
,
Rakauskas, Vytautas
,
Skrodenytė Arbačiauskienė, Vesta
in
Brown trout
,
Condition factor
,
Dyes
2025
The application of alizarin dye for the marking of fish is a widely adopted practice in post-stocking monitoring programmes. Nevertheless, concerns regarding the welfare implications of alizarin staining persist. The present study conclusively demonstrated that ARS dye exerts instantaneous and protracted deleterious effects on the physiological parameters (gill ventilation frequency, homeostasis in the gut microbiota, total number of erythrocytes and leukocytes) and body fitness (total length, weight and Fulton’s condition factor) of S. trutta fry. The validity of the dye-marked fish stocking effectiveness studies is called into question by these findings.
Journal Article
Impact of Beaver Dams on Abundance and Distribution of Anadromous Salmonids in Two Lowland Streams in Lithuania
by
Virbickas, Tomas
,
Steponėnas, Andrius
,
Stakėnas, Saulius
in
Abundance
,
Anadromous species
,
Animal Migration - physiology
2015
European beaver dams impeded movements of anadromous salmonids as it was established by fishing survey, fish tagging and redd counts in two lowland streams in Lithuania. Significant differences in abundancies of other litophilic fish species and evenness of representation by species in the community were detected upstream and downstream of the beaver dams. Sea trout parr marked with RFID tags passed through several successive beaver dams in upstream direction, but no tagged fish were detected above the uppermost dam. Increase in abundances of salmonid parr in the stream between the beaver dams and decrease below the dams were recorded in November, at the time of spawning of Atlantic salmon and sea trout, but no significant changes were detected in the sections upstream of the dams. After construction of several additional beaver dams in the downstream sections of the studied streams, abundance of Atlantic salmon parr downstream of the dams decreased considerably in comparison with that estimated before construction.
Journal Article
Understanding recreational targets and ecological consequences: increased northern pike stocking reflected in top avian predator diet
by
Rumbutis Saulius
,
Dagys Mindaugas
,
Deivis, Dementavičius
in
Diet
,
Ecological effects
,
Environmental changes
2021
Fish stocking is commonly used to enhance recreational fisheries; however, the side effects of stocking at the ecosystem scale have rarely been tested. Avian predators, because of their high position in food webs, can serve as indicators of environmental change, including prey-species abundance. The scope of this study was to understand whether recent changes in northern pike (Esox lucius) stocking on a national scale could cascade through food webs and significantly shape the diet of a predator––the white-tailed eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla). The stocking of pike in state-owned waters in Lithuania has increased two- to threefold since 2005. A significant increase in the proportion of pike in the breeding-season diet of the white-tailed eagle has also been observed. We explain the increase in pike in the predator’s diet as being a causal consequence of pike stocking. We encourage consideration of the entire food web when launching/terminating recreational fish stocking programmes.
Journal Article
Interactions of semiconductor Cd-based quantum dots and Cd2+ with gut bacteria isolated from wild Salmo trutta fry
by
Januškaitė, Emilija
,
Virbickas, Tomas
,
Butrimienė, Renata
in
Antibacterial efficacy
,
Aquaculture, Fisheries and Fish Science
,
Aquatic organisms
2022
Background With the rapid development of nanotechnology, more and more nanoproducts are being released into the environment where they may both pose ecological risks and be toxic to living organisms. The ecotoxicological impact of quantum dots (QDs), a class of nanoparticles (NPs), on aquatic organisms is becoming an emerging issue, this due to their nano-specific properties, to the physico-chemical transformation in the environment and to the possible release of toxic metals from their structure such as Cd. Methods In this work, (i) spectroscopic measurements of commercially available Cd-based QDs (CdSe/ZnS-COOH) were made at various pH values (5.0 and 7.0) to study their interactions (at a concentration of 4 nm) with various strains of Gram-positive and Gram-negative gut bacteria after short-term exposure and (ii) the antibacterial efficacy of QDs and Cd2+ (at a concentration 0.09–3.56 mM) against gut bacteria isolated from wild freshwater Salmo trutta fry was studied at different temperatures (15 °C and 25 °C) and pH values (5.0 and 7.0) by applying a well-established disc diffusion assay. Results Twenty-six gut bacterial isolates from wild Salmo trutta fry were identified as Aeromonas spp., A. popoffii, A. salmonicida, A. sobria, Carnobacterium maltaromaticum, Buttiauxella sp., Listeria sp., Microbacterium sp., Shewanella putrefaciens and Serratia sp. Cd-based (CdSe/ZnS-COOH) QDs at a concentration of 4 nm were found to be stable in aqueous media (with pH 7.0) or starting to form aggregates (at pH 5.0), thus, apparently, did not release heavy metals (HMs) into the media over 48 h in conditions of light or dark and did not show antibacterial efficacy on the gut bacteria isolated from wild Salmo trutta fry after short-term (9 h and 48 h) incubations. Cd2+ was found to produce significant dose-dependent toxic effects on bacterial growth, and the size of the inhibition zones on some of the tested strains significantly correlated with temperature. The most sensitive and the most resistant to Cd2+ were the Gram-positive bacteria, for which the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) values of Cd2+ were 0.09–0.27 mM and 3.11–3.29 mM respectively and varied significantly between the tested temperatures (15 °C and 25 °C). The MIC values of Cd2+ for the Gram-negative bacteria (18 out of 22 strains) ranged from 0.44 to 0.71 mM and did not differ significantly between the tested temperatures. Among the selected Gram-positive and Gram-negative strains, those with the higher sensitivity towards Cd2+ also revealed relatively stronger signals of QDs photoluminescence (PL) when transferred after incubation into fresh medium without QDs. In addition, the formation of endogenous metalloporphyrins observed spectroscopically in some bacterial strains indicates certain differences in metabolic activity that may play a protective role against potential oxidative damage.
Journal Article
The Combined Impact of Hydropower Plants and Climate Change on River Runoff and Fish Habitats in Lowland Watersheds
by
Virbickas, Tomas
,
Šarauskienė, Diana
,
Vezza, Paolo
in
anthropogenic activities
,
Aquatic ecosystems
,
Barbatula barbatula
2021
Aquatic ecosystems are particularly vulnerable to anthropogenic activity and climate change. The changes in flow regimes in Lithuanian lowland rivers due to the operation of hydropower plants (HPPs) and the impact of altered flow on some fish species have already been studied. The impact of climate change on future natural river runoff and the structure of fish assemblages was also investigated. However, it is still unknown how the combined effect of climate change and flow regulation related to hydropower generation may affect fish assemblages in the downstream river reaches below the Lithuanian HPPs. In this study, the physical habitat modelling system MesoHABSIM was used to simulate spatial and temporal changes in aquatic habitats availability for different fish species under the influence of HPP at different climate change scenarios. Changes in the available habitat were assessed for common fish species in four HPP-affected rivers representing different hydrological regions of Lithuania. The modelling results showed that the operation of HPP under climate change conditions in most rivers could be beneficial for small benthic fish species such as gudgeon Gobio gobio and stone loach Barbatula barbatula. Meanwhile, for larger fish species (e.g., chub Squalius cephalus and vimba Vimba vimba) the alteration in the temporal availability of suitable habitat was relatively higher.
Journal Article
The use of native piscivorous fishes for the eradication of the invasive Chinese Sleeper, Perccottus glenii
by
Virbickas, Tomas
,
Steponėnas, Andrius
,
Stakėnas, Saulius
in
Biological control
,
Biological invasions
,
Dispersal
2019
The chief aim of invasive species management is to prevent biological invasions by taking measures for suppressing or eradicating potential invaders. Biological control as a management tool is frequently implemented to reduce the population size, adverse ecological impacts, and dispersal of invasive species. The efficacy of biological control measures in managing the Perccottus glenii population was assessed in four small lakes of Lithuania. The biocontrol was carried out by introducing the native piscivorous fishes Esox lucius and Perca fluviatilis into the invaded water bodies for two successive reproductive seasons. The stocking of these fishes led to an instant reduction in P. glenii abundances, and the outcome of the repeated stocking was complete disappearance of the species from the water bodies investigated. Our study proves that native predator fishes can be successfully used for eradicating well-established P. glenii populations in small eutrophic lakes. We hope the current study results will contribute to developing risk-commensurate methodologies for the control of invasive P. glenii populations in small water bodies. L'objectif principal de la gestion des espèces envahissantes est de prévenir les invasions biologiques en prenant des mesures pour supprimer ou éradiquer les envahisseurs potentiels. La lutte biologique en tant qu'outil de gestion est souvent mise en œuvre pour réduire la taille des populations, les impacts écologiques négatifs et la dispersion des espèces envahissantes. L'efficacité des mesures de lutte biologique dans la gestion de la population de Perccottus glenii a été évaluée dans quatre petits lacs de Lituanie. Le biocontrôle a été effectué en introduisant les poissons piscivores indigènes Esox lucius et Perca fluviatilis dans les plans d'eau envahis pendant deux saisons successives de reproduction. L'empoissonnement de ces espèces a entraîné une réduction instantanée de l'abondance de P. glenii , et l'empoissonnement répété a entraîné la disparition complète de l'espèce des plans d'eau étudiés. Notre étude prouve que les poissons prédateurs indigènes peuvent être utilisés avec succès pour éradiquer les populations bien établies de P. glenii dans les petits lacs eutrophes. Nous espérons que les résultats de l'étude actuelle contribueront à l'élaboration de méthodologies adaptées au risque pour le contrôle des populations invasives de P. glenii dans les petits plans d'eau.
Journal Article
Prioritisation of barriers according to their impact on migratory fish in the lowland river basin district
2024
Artificial barriers are one of the most damaging anthropogenic factors, but are also socio-economic constructions, so the decision between removing a barrier and installing a fishway must be justified. The aim was to develop a system to quantify the amount of suitable habitat for migratory fish above barriers, to assess barriers’ passability, to prioritise them in current and historical terms and to take into account the impact of the reservoir in the selection of barrier management alternatives. For this purpose, the proportion of suitable area and the potential number of spawners were calculated separately for the flooded and free-flowing river sections above the barrier. The effect of the flooded area and fishway efficiency on the potential number of individuals was assessed and the historical importance of the areas above each barrier was evaluated. The results show that the proportion of suitable area in the total area above the barriers varies between 5 and 31%. Short river stretches of high habitat quality have a higher reproductive potential than much longer stretches of lower habitat quality. Dams with fishways can still be among the most negatively impacting barriers if they are located in the migration route of fish into a large part of the basin.
Journal Article