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Dive into the research topics where Antoni Amirowicz is active.

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Featured researches published by Antoni Amirowicz.


Waterbirds | 2006

Selective Foraging of Grey Heron (Ardea cinerea) in Relation to Density and Composition of the Littoral Fish Community in a Submontane Dam Reservoir

Robert Gwiazda; Antoni Amirowicz

Abstract Grey Herons foraged in a high number only in one of three preferred foraging areas in the Dobczyce Reservoir, S. Poland: (1) the backwater area at the main tributary inlet (MTI), (2) the shore of the near-dam pool (NDP), and (3) shallow lateral bay (SLB). Median value of the fraction of herons foraging in MTI was 64% of all counted in the reservoir in 2001-2002 despite the smallest fish density there (2 times smaller than in NDP, and by one order of magnitude than in SLB). Roach (Rutilus rutilus) was the most abundant both in the heron diet (13 species) and in littoral fish communities (8 species). Total length of prey ranged within 4.2-26.5 cm. The individual size range of littoral fish was similar (4.6-31.5 cm). However, the size distributions in three foraging areas and in heron diet were different. Fish longer than the median total length of heron prey, i.e. ≥8 cm in total length constituted 51.9% of heron diet, 34.7% of the fish community in MTI, 8.5% in the psammolittoral of NDP, and only 5.2% in the phytolittoral of SLB. The strategy of selective choice of longer fish from those occurring at foraging sites allowed greater reward with roughly unchanged foraging cost. This may explain why Grey Heron foraged mainly in the habitat with the lowest fish abundance and highest water turbidity but with the largest prey size.


Acta Geophysica | 2017

Assessment of river hydromorphological quality for restoration purposes: an example of the application of RHQ method to a Polish Carpathian river

Hanna Hajdukiewicz; Bartłomiej Wyżga; Joanna Zawiejska; Antoni Amirowicz; Paweł Oglęcki; Artur Radecki-Pawlik

Planning and implementation of effective restoration projects require appropriate assessment of a river’s hydromorphological status. Two European standards on hydromorphological assessment of rivers and hydromorphological assessment methods used in Poland are reviewed in the context of their applicability for river restoration purposes. River Hydromorphological Quality assessment method is presented with a case study of the Biała River, Polish Carpathians, where this assessment was used as basis for a restoration project aimed to establish an erodible river corridor. The results of the assessment revealed significant differences in hydromorphological quality between unmanaged and channelized river cross-sections, indicating channel regulation as a major cause of the hydromorphological degradation of the Biała and confirming the choice of the erodible river corridor as an appropriate method of its restoration. The assessment indicated hydromorphological features of the river that were severely modified within the channelized reaches and which are likely to improve the most with the removal of bank protection and allowing free channel migration.


Science of The Total Environment | 2018

Ecological state of a mountain river before and after a large flood: Implications for river status assessment

Hanna Hajdukiewicz; Bartłomiej Wyżga; Antoni Amirowicz; Paweł Oglęcki; Artur Radecki-Pawlik; Joanna Zawiejska; Paweł Mikuś

Assessment of the ecological status of rivers is key to monitoring the achievement of the environmental goal of the EU Water Framework Directive and the success of restoration projects. In summer of 2009 and 2010, repeated assessments of physical habitat conditions and of fish and benthic invertebrate communities were performed at low-flow conditions in 10 unmanaged and 10 channelized cross-sections of the Biała River, Polish Carpathians. Between the two surveys, an 80-year flood occurred, significantly affecting habitat characteristics and river communities. In unmanaged cross-sections, active channel width increased, whereas the degree of cross-sectional variation of flow velocity decreased. In channelized cross-sections, the increase in active channel width and the cross-sectional variation of flow velocity was accompanied by a decrease in bed-material grain size. Before the flood, the unmanaged cross-sections hosted 2.3 times more benthic invertebrate taxa than the channelized ones, whereas after the flood, the number of taxa they supported was so reduced that the taxonomic richness of benthic invertebrate assemblages in both cross-section types became similar. In comparison to pre-flood conditions, the abundance of fish juveniles (YOY) in unmanaged cross-sections was reduced nearly by half; before the flood they hosted 5 times more juvenile individuals than channelized cross-sections and only twice as many after the flood. Finally, a differing assessment of flood impact on the ecological river quality was obtained with the invertebrate-based BMWP-PL index and the European Fish Index, with the former indicating a significant reduction of the quality in unmanaged cross-sections and the latter pointing to no such change. The results indicate that assessments performed before or after a major flood may yield significantly different results for the quality of abiotic and biotic elements of the river ecosystem. Final assessment should thus be based on repeated surveys to balance the effect of extreme hydrological events.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Back from the Brink: The Holocene History of the Carpathian Barbel Barbus carpathicus

Maciej K. Konopiński; Antoni Amirowicz; Petr Kotlík; Krzysztof Kukuła; Aneta Bylak; Ladislav Pekárik; Alena Šediva

As a result of specific adaptations and habitat preferences strongly rheophilic fish species may show high levels of endemism. Many temperate rheophilic fish species were subjected to a series of range contractions during the Pleistocene, and then successfully expanded during the Holocene, colonising previously abandoned areas. The Carpathian barbel (Barbus carpathicus Kotlík, Tsigenopoulos, Ráb et Berrebi 2002) occurs in the montane streams in three basins of the main Central European rivers in the northern part of the Carpathian range. We used genetic variation within 3 mitochondrial and 9 microsatellite loci to determine a pattern of postglacial expansion in B. carpathicus. We found that overall genetic variation within the species is relatively low. Estimate of time to the most recent common ancestor (tMRCA) of mitochondrial sequences falls within the Holocene. The highest levels of genetic variation found in upper reaches of the Tisa river in the Danube basin suggest that glacial refugia were located in the south-eastern part of the species range. Our data suggest that the species crossed different watersheds at least six times as three genetically distinct groups (probably established in different expansion episodes) were found in northern part of the species range. Clines of genetic variation were observed in both the Danube and Vistula basins, which probably resulted from subsequent bottlenecks while colonizing successive habitats (south eastern populations) or due to the admixture of genetically diverse individuals to a previously uniform population (Vistula basin). Therefore, B. carpathicus underwent both demographic breakdowns and expansions during the Holocene, showing its distribution and demography are sensitive to environmental change. Our findings are important in the light of the current human-induced habitats alterations.


Hydrobiologia | 2012

How equally sized piscivorous birds and fish sharing common food resources may reduce possible feeding interactions between them

Antoni Amirowicz; Robert Gwiazda

The diets of sympatric predators may overlap, especially when their body sizes are similar and foraging area is relatively small. It may be also supposed that some differences in their foraging strategies may counteract competitive interactions among them, and therefore be of advantage to these species. To reveal such phenomena the composition of food of cormorant and adult pikeperch was studied in the Dobczyce Reservoir (S Poland) from June to November 2002. The main prey species were the same and the range of prey size was similar for both piscivores. Despite these similarities, the potential for dietary overlap was strongly reduced due to two differences in their foraging patterns: (1) different preferred prey species (cormorants foraged mainly roach, whereas pikeperch selected juvenile percids); (2) different size of simultaneously selected prey (in summer, cormorants selected larger prey, while in autumn larger prey was selected by pikeperch). These differences may be explained by some general features of birds and fishes, which determine the costs to the individual of capturing prey. The observed selection of different prey species and sizes may be also important for the co-occurrence of other piscivorous birds and fishes sharing common food resources.


River Research and Applications | 2009

Hydromorphological conditions, potential fish habitats and the fish community in a mountain river subjected to variable human impacts, the Czarny Dunajec, Polish Carpathians.

Bartłomiej Wyżga; Antoni Amirowicz; Artur Radecki-Pawlik; Joanna Zawiejska


Limnologica | 2014

Response of fish and benthic invertebrate communities to constrained channel conditions in a mountain river: Case study of the Biała, Polish Carpathians

Bartłomiej Wyżga; Antoni Amirowicz; Paweł Oglęcki; Hanna Hajdukiewicz; Artur Radecki-Pawlik; Joanna Zawiejska; Paweł Mikuś


Journal of Fish Biology | 2007

Probable direction of the postglacial colonization of rivers on northern slopes of the Carpathian Ridge by Barbus carpathicus (Teleostei: Cyprinidae) evidenced by cline of genetic variation

Maciej K. Konopiński; Antoni Amirowicz; K. Kukuła


Aquatic Ecology | 2006

Bioaccumulation of trace elements in roach, silver bream, rudd, and perch living in an inundated opencast sulphur mine

Ewa Szarek-Gwiazda; Antoni Amirowicz


Geomorphology | 2016

Environment-friendly reduction of flood risk and infrastructure damage in a mountain river: Case study of the Czarny Dunajec

Paweł Mikuś; Bartłomiej Wyżga; Artur Radecki-Pawlik; Joanna Zawiejska; Antoni Amirowicz; Paweł Oglęcki

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Paweł Oglęcki

Warsaw University of Life Sciences

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Paweł Mikuś

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Robert Gwiazda

Polish Academy of Sciences

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