Michal Tušer
Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
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Featured researches published by Michal Tušer.
Hydrobiologia | 2014
Tomáš Jůza; Mojmír Vašek; Michal Kratochvíl; Petr Blabolil; Martin Čech; Vladislav Draštík; Jaroslava Frouzová; Milan Muška; Jiří Peterka; Marie Prchalová; Milan Říha; Michal Tušer; Jan Kubečka
Large year-to-year variability in different fish species recruitment has been confirmed by previous studies while diurnal patterns of occupation in two basic reservoir habitats (pelagic and littoral) by different age-0 fish species in late summer are still unclear. Data collected over an 11-year period regarding late-summer age-0 fish assemblages in pelagic and littoral habitats of a reservoir were used to test the recruitment instability and to investigate diurnal habitat use. Trawling was conducted in the pelagic habitat at night while beach seining was conducted in the littoral habitat during day and night. Fluctuations in age-0 fish abundance and species composition were observed with both sampling methods; however, the following spatio-temporal patterns were relatively stable in most investigated years: (1) pelagic species (pikeperch; Sander lucioperca, small perch; Perca fluviatilis, bream; Abramis brama at night), (2) littoral species (large perch, asp; Leuciscus aspius, dace; Leuciscus leuciscus), (3) migratory species likely performing diel horizontal migrations (bleak; Alburnus alburnus), (4) species abundant in the littoral habitat both during day and night and also in pelagic habitat at night (roach; Rutilus rutilus) and (5) species detected in both habitats exclusively at night (ruffe; Gymnocephalus cernuus).
Hydrobiologia | 2015
Milan Říha; Daniel Ricard; Mojmír Vašek; Marie Prchalová; Tomáš Mrkvička; Tomáš Jůza; Martin Čech; Vladislav Draštík; Milan Muška; Michal Kratochvíl; Jiří Peterka; Michal Tušer; Jaromír Seďa; Petr Blabolil; Martin Bláha; Josef Wanzenböck; Jan Kubečka
We investigated diel habitat use of fish covering the littoral and pelagic zones of the Římov Reservoir (Czech Republic) and analyzed the influence of predator presence and of shifting feeding habitats in all dominant species and age groups. Our sampling revealed distinctive diel changes of fish distribution in the reservoir, which were age- and species-dependent. The overall abundance of subadult fish in littoral habitats was significantly higher at night than during the daytime. Subadults were almost absent in pelagic habitat during the day and their presence increased during the night, although densities were smaller than in the littoral. Adults preferred the pelagic zone during the day and partly migrated to the littoral at night. Potential fish predators were most likely responsible for small fish avoidance of the littoral and pelagic zones during day. Higher availability of food in the littoral was the most important driver of the high occurrence of subadults at night. Day preference of pelagic zone by adults is most likely caused by higher profitability of this habitat in comparison with littoral. The reasons for night inshore migration of adults are not obvious, but the homogenization of their distribution or resting in the littoral could explain such behavior.
Journal of Fish Biology | 2011
Mojmír Vašek; T. Jůza; Martin Čech; Michal Kratochvíl; Marie Prchalová; Jaroslava Frouzová; M. Říha; Michal Tušer; Jaromír Seďa; Jan Kubečka
In July 2008, early juvenile tubenose goby Proterorhinus semilunaris were found in nocturnal pelagic waters of the Vranov Reservoir, Czech Republic. Presence of benthic-living prey in the guts of these fish suggested migration between benthic and pelagic habitats.
Journal of Fish Biology | 2018
Jakub Žák; Tomáš Jůza; Petr Blabolil; Roman Baran; Daniel Bartoň; Vladislav Draštík; Jaroslava Frouzová; Michaela Holubová; Henk A. M. Ketelaars; Luboš Kočvara; Jan Kubečka; Tomáš Mrkvička; Milan Muška; Milan Říha; Zuzana Sajdlová; Marek Šmejkal; Michal Tušer; Mojmír Vašek; Lukáš Vejřík; Ivana Vejříková; Arco J. Wagenvoort
The higher proportion of males of the invasive round goby Neogobius melanostomus in samples from two activity selective passive fishing gears compared with one activity non-selective fishing gear in three Dutch lakes is related to higher male locomotory activity and is a sex-dependent trait. This difference in activity reflects the different ecology of male and female N. melanostomus.
Water Resources Research | 2017
Michal Tušer; Tomáš Picek; Zuzana Sajdlová; Tomáš Jůza; Milan Muška; Jaroslava Frouzová
Gas ebullition of river impoundments plays an increasingly significant role, particularly in transporting methane CH4 from their sediments to the atmosphere, and contributing to the global carbon budget and global warming. Quantifying stochastic and episodic nature of gas ebullition is complicated especially when conventionally conducted by using coverage-limited gas traps. Current knowledge of seasonality in a reservoirs gas ebullition is lacking in the literature. For this reason, advanced acoustic surveying was intensively applied to determine spatiotemporal distributions of gas ebullition in a European water-storage reservoir for two years. Additionally, the sampling was accompanied with gas collecting for analyzing gas composition. The gas released from the reservoir was primarily composed of CH4 (on average 52%, up to 94%). The longitudinal distribution of gas ebullition was mainly determined by a proximity to the river inflow as a source of organic matter. A magnitude of ebullitive fluxes within the reservoir varied up to 1,300 mL m−2 d−1 (30 mmol CH4 m−2 d−1). The most significant period of ebullition has turned out to be in fall, on average reaching a sevenfold ebullitive flux (70 mL m−2 d−1, 1.6 mmol CH4 m−2 d−1) higher than in the rest of the season. A substantial contribution to the fall peak was induced by an expansion of gas ebullition into greater depths, covering two thirds of the reservoir in late fall. The study demonstrates that the ebullitive fluxes of the temperate water storage reservoir were correlated to season, depth, and inflow proximity.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Milan Muška; Michal Tušer; Jaroslava Frouzová; Tomáš Mrkvička; Daniel Ricard; Jaromír Seďa; Federico Morelli; Jan Kubečka
Understanding spatial distribution of organisms in heterogeneous environment remains one of the chief issues in ecology. Spatial organization of freshwater fish was investigated predominantly on large-scale, neglecting important local conditions and ecological processes. However, small-scale processes are of an essential importance for individual habitat preferences and hence structuring trophic cascades and species coexistence. In this work, we analysed the real-time spatial distribution of pelagic freshwater fish in the Římov Reservoir (Czechia) observed by hydroacoustics in relation to important environmental predictors during 48 hours at 3-h interval. Effect of diurnal cycle was revealed of highest significance in all spatial models with inverse trends between fish distribution and predictors in day and night in general. Our findings highlighted daytime pelagic fish distribution as highly aggregated, with general fish preferences for central, deep and highly illuminated areas, whereas nighttime distribution was more disperse and fish preferred nearshore steep sloped areas with higher depth. This turnover suggests prominent movements of significant part of fish assemblage between pelagic and nearshore areas on a diel basis. In conclusion, hydroacoustics, GIS and spatial modelling proved as valuable tool for predicting local fish distribution and elucidate its drivers, which has far reaching implications for understanding freshwater ecosystem functioning.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Roman Baran; Tomáš Jůza; Michal Tušer; Helge Balk; Petr Blabolil; Martin Čech; Vladislav Draštík; Jaroslava Frouzová; Asanka D. Jayasinghe; Ievgen Koliada; Tomáš Mrkvička; Milan Muška; Daniel Ricard; Zuzana Sajdlová; Lukáš Vejřík; Jan Kubečka
For ethical reasons and animal welfare, it is becoming increasingly more important to carry out ecological surveys with a non-invasive approach. Information about fish distribution and abundance in the upper water column is often fundamental. However, this information is extremely hard to obtain using classical hydroacoustic methods. We developed a rigid frame system for pushing upward looking transducers of the scientific echo sounder (38 and 120 kHz) in front of the research vessel. The efficiency of the new approach for monitoring juvenile fish at night was investigated by comparing the results with a quantitative fry trawl in the Římov Reservoir in the Czech Republic. The experimental setup enabled comparisons for the 0–3 m and 3–6 m depth layers, which are utilized by almost all juvenile fish in summer. No statistically significant differences in the estimated abundance of juveniles were found between the two sampling methods. The comparison of abundance estimates gathered by the two frequencies were also not significantly different. The predicted mean lengths from acoustic sampling and the trawl catches differed by less than 10 mm in all comparisons. Results suggest that mobile hydroacoustic upward-looking systems can fill the methodological gap in non-invasive surveying of surface fishes.
Journal of Fish Biology | 2008
Marie Prchalová; Jan Kubečka; Mojmír Vašek; Jiří Peterka; T. Jůza; M. Říha; O. Jarolím; Michal Tušer; Michal Kratochvíl; Martin Čech; Vladislav Draštík; Jaroslava Frouzová; Eva Hohausová
Fisheries Research | 2012
Georg Rakowitz; Michal Tušer; Milan Říha; Tomáš Jůza; Helge Balk; Jan Kubečka
Journal of Limnology | 2009
T. Jůza; Mojmír Vašek; Jan Kubečka; Jaromír Seďa; Josef Matěna; Marie Prchalová; Jiří Peterka; Milan Říha; Oldřich Jarolím; Michal Tušer; Michal Kratochvíl; Martin Čech; Vladislav Draštík; Jaroslava Frouzová; Eva Hohausová; Jiří Žaloudík