2017
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0174582
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Abstract: The Tonle Sap Lake (TSL) is a flood-pulse system. It is the largest natural lake in South-East Asia and constitutes one of the largest fisheries over the world, supporting the livelihood of million peoples. Nonetheless, the Mekong River Basin is changing rapidly due to accelerating water infrastructure development (hydropower, irrigation, flood control, and water supply) and climate change, bringing considerable modifications to the annual flood-pulse of the TSL. Such modifications are expected to have strong … Show more

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Cited by 42 publications
(52 citation statements)
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“…, Kong et al. ). During the wet season, rising waters in this system expand outward from the 2,600‐km 2 permanent water at the lake's center and expand into 12,876 km 2 of surrounding natural and agricultural habitats (Fig.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…, Kong et al. ). During the wet season, rising waters in this system expand outward from the 2,600‐km 2 permanent water at the lake's center and expand into 12,876 km 2 of surrounding natural and agricultural habitats (Fig.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…, Kong et al. ). To account for tissue turnover time for stable isotope analysis, fish sampled for stable isotopes during July were assigned to the dry season, and those captured during November, December, and January were assigned to the wet season (details provided in Appendix and see Pool et al.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This citizen‐science reporting and observer network is complemented by a series of other survey techniques, used in combination and applied at set locations (Elliott et al, ; Gotzek & Johnson, ). Targeted ecological surveys to determine population distribution (Kong et al , ; Elliott & Chheng, ), identify spawning site locations (Elliott & Chheng, ), evaluate food‐web ecology (McMeans et al, ; Pool et al, ) and for population genetic analysis (Elliott & Uy, ), using traditional standardised nets are seasonally implemented at set locations. Both qualitative and quantitative market surveys are used to determine commercial fishing pressure (Gotzek & Johnson, ).…”
Section: Application To the Complex Lower Mekong Basin Multi‐species mentioning
confidence: 99%