Abstract:
Conservation of the inland fin fish in Bangladesh has been compromised due to a lack
of zoogeographic division and ecofaunal relationship identification. The study
attempted to identify finfish fauna, establish ecofaunal relationships, estimate
zoogeographic division, and assess the water quality at 13 stations in Bangladesh's 8
major water bodies, i.e., the Brahmaputra and Jamuna River from the Brahmaputra
Jamuna River Basin, the Ganges River and Padma River from the Ganges-Padma River
Basin, the Hakaluki Haor and Meghna River from the Surma-Meghna River Basin, and
the Kaptai Lake and Sangu River from the Basin of Chittagong Region from June 2018
to February 2022. Systematic Index of Freshwater Finfish (SIFF), Grounded Theory or
Narrative Analysis, Mapping and Satellite image analyses, Multivariant statistical
techniques like Jaccard's dichotomy coefficient, cluster analysis, Non-metric
Multidimensional Scaling (nMDS), Principal Component Analysis (PCA), and Water
Quality Index (WQI) were used in this investigation. Permutation tests have been
conducted to justify the statistical validation and p-value estimation. A total of 193
finfish species belonging to 19 orders, 50 families, and 121 genera were identified from
the study areas. These species represent 6 critically endangered, 16 endangered, and 21
vulnerable finfish species. The Brahmaputra River, Jamuna River, Ganges River,
Padma River, Hakaluki Haor, Meghna River, Kaptai Lake, and Sangu River represented
the alluvial riverine, braided riverine, meandering riverine, dynamic riverine, marsh
wetland, estuarine, lacustrine, and mountain stream ecosystems, respectively—distinct
fish fauna and characteristics of these eight ecosystems established ecofaunal
relationships. The Brahmaputra-Jamuna River Basin, Ganges-Padma River Basin,
Surma-Meghna River Basin, and the Basin of Chittagong Region were identified as
inland fish zoogeographic zones in Bangladesh. This zonation was based on river and
drainage system divisions, finfish faunal dispersion, ecosystem diversity, and
distributional dissimilarities of finfish families, genera, species, and endemic species.
Significant seasonal fluctuations in water quality have been observed across all study
areas. The water quality of eight inland fish habitats was assessed using seven indices,
with EC, TDS, alkalinity, and temperature being the principal ones. Policymakers
should adopt a conservation plan based on zoogeographic zones. Priority should be
given to improving the principal components of water quality and protecting threatened
finfish species that inhabit single habitats.