Rehabilitation of a tropical storm-water drain creates a novel fish assemblage

2021 
Abstract A 2.7-km canalised section of the Kallang River, a major storm-water drain and reservoir spillway in Singapore, was rehabilitated into a 3-km naturalised, meandering river between 2009 and 2011. A combination of plants, natural materials, and civil engineering techniques were introduced to soften the edges of the waterway, to give it a more natural appearance and prevent soil erosion. Baseline data and published evidence of enhancement of aquatic biodiversity in this naturalised urban waterway are lacking, as there have not been any comprehensive biological surveys of the system to date. To determine the effect of rehabilitation, we quantitatively compared the fish assemblage and abiotic variables in the Kallang River after its rehabilitation (re-named Kallang River at Bishan-Ang Mo Kio Park or KRBAP; 2016–2018) against a downstream unrehabilitated section of the river (Kallang Canal; 2012). Secondly, we qualitatively compared fish assemblages and abiotic variables at the KRBAP and the Kallang Canal, to their source (upstream) reservoir, as well as to natural forest streams in close proximity. The KRBAP has a unique fish assemblage, which is dominated by two non-native cichlid taxa (quetzal cichlid, Vieja melanura (68%) and tilapia, Oreochromis spp. (17%)). Fish species richness (p
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