DOI: 10.3390/fishes11070379 ISSN: 2410-3888

A Numerical Simulation Study on the Distribution Pattern of the Habitat Suitability Index near the New Eco-Revetment Structure for Grass Carp with Different Life Cycles

Jian Li, Qiang He, Xiaoling Zhang, Pingyi Wang

Fish are an important criterion for evaluating the quality of river ecosystems, and water flow characteristics may be the main factor affecting the living environment of fish. As the main component of a river, the topography of the bank slope has a significant impact on the characteristics of nearshore water flow. At the same time, eco-revetment structure has the functions of smoothing water flow, maintaining stable bank slopes, and improving river ecology. It can reset the distribution of nearshore water flow and provide a stable living environment for fish. This study focuses on the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River as the research area, with the main research object being grass carp. We construct a generalized model based on river morphology and flow characteristics. A new eco-revetment structure is proposed with the main research area of nearshore waters, aiming to improve the flow state of nearshore water and enhance its ecology. A suitability evaluation model for grass carp habitat was constructed based on Large Eddy Simulation and fuzzy mathematics theory, with water flow as the main habitat influencing factor. We study the distribution pattern of suitability for grass carp habitats near nearshore waters. The results indicate that the nitrogen phosphorus ratio near the top of the revetment structure is close to the Redfield value and can be used as a stable foraging area for fish. The flow rate is the dominant factor for the habitat of juvenile grass carp. When there is no vegetation, the suitability of region A is 0–0.4, the suitability of region B is 0.2–0.6, and the area proportion of the high suitability area (0.4–0.6) is maintained at 10–30% with the increase in the flow rate. Region C is not suitable for the long-term survival of juvenile grass carp. When there is vegetation, the suitability of region A ranges from 0 to 0.6, and the proportion of low-suitability areas decreases. The suitability of region B ranges from 0.4 to 0.6, and the proportion of suitable areas is positively correlated with flow velocity. The suitability of region C is consistent with the absence of vegetation. The dominant factors for fish spawning habitat are flow velocity, vorticity, and kinetic energy gradient. The spawning suitability zone (HSI ≥ 0.6) is located between the spanwise structures, with a proportion positively correlated with flow velocity and higher suitability on the deep-water side. The existence of fish has little impact on the habitat. In the juvenile fish habitat area, the proportion of areas suitable for juvenile fish in region A has slightly decreased, and the suitability of region B has increased. In spawning grounds, an HSI ≥ 0.6 accounts for about 5% of the decrease compared to no-fish conditions, and overall can meet the needs of fish habitat, foraging, and spawning. This article provides ideas and foundations for the design of future new eco-revetment structures and a suitability analysis of living environments for fish.

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