<p>The Danube River Basin (DRB) harbors the highest documented fish species richness of any European river, yet native populations face increasing threats from physical infrastructures that impede longitudinal and lateral connectivity, unsustainable fisheries, the introduction of non-native species, and climate change. Spanning across 19 countries, the DRB presents conservation challenges that demand coordinated, transboundary data sharing. The present database compiles and standardizes fish occurrence datasets that have been previously unavailable, fragmented and often restricted by federal agencies, research institutes, and conservation organizations, integrating also data from sources such as the Global Biodiversity Information Facility, the Joint Danube Surveys, the European Fish Index, and national monitoring programmes. It contains 133,131 occurrence records across 114 fish species, representing 30 families and 17 orders, with a temporal range from 1856 to 2024, organized into 39 columns. By supporting fish community conservation, invasive alien species monitoring, and climate impact assessments, this database provides a vital resource for developing evidence-based management strategies in the DRB.</p>

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The Danube Fish Database: documenting species distributions across a major European river basin

  • Yusdiel Torres-Cambas,
  • András Ambrus,
  • Miklós Bán,
  • Bálint Bánó,
  • Anthony Basooma,
  • Vanessa Bremerich,
  • Florian Borgwardt,
  • Maša Čarf,
  • Irina Cernisencu,
  • Gorčin Cvijanović,
  • István Czeglédi,
  • Sami Domisch,
  • Tibor Erős,
  • Zoltán Fehér,
  • Vivien Füstös,
  • Juergen Geist,
  • Thomas Hein,
  • Milica Jaćimović,
  • Sonja C. Jähnig,
  • Béla Kiss,
  • Maroš Kubala,
  • Klaudija Lebar,
  • Borislava Kostadinova Margaritova,
  • Matej Marušić,
  • Paul Meulenbroek,
  • Stoyan Dobrev Mihov,
  • Attila Mozsár,
  • Zoltán Müller,
  • Christoffer Nagel,
  • Iulian Nichersu,
  • Dušan Nikolić,
  • Sandi Orlić,
  • Joachim Pander,
  • Polona Pengal,
  • Marina Piria,
  • László Polyák,
  • Bálint Preiszner,
  • Simon Rusjan,
  • Márton Sallai,
  • Zoltán Sallai,
  • Péter Sály,
  • Andrea Samu,
  • Brigitte Sasano,
  • Astrid Schmidt-Kloiber,
  • András Sevcsik,
  • Marija Smederevac-Lalić,
  • András Specziár,
  • Twan Stoffers,
  • Zoltán Szalóky,
  • Renáta Szita,
  • Gábor Takács,
  • Péter Takács,
  • Maxim Teichert,
  • Milcho Todorov,
  • Balázs Tóth,
  • Teodora Trichkova,
  • Damir Valić,
  • Zoltán Vitál,
  • Martin Tschikof

摘要

The Danube River Basin (DRB) harbors the highest documented fish species richness of any European river, yet native populations face increasing threats from physical infrastructures that impede longitudinal and lateral connectivity, unsustainable fisheries, the introduction of non-native species, and climate change. Spanning across 19 countries, the DRB presents conservation challenges that demand coordinated, transboundary data sharing. The present database compiles and standardizes fish occurrence datasets that have been previously unavailable, fragmented and often restricted by federal agencies, research institutes, and conservation organizations, integrating also data from sources such as the Global Biodiversity Information Facility, the Joint Danube Surveys, the European Fish Index, and national monitoring programmes. It contains 133,131 occurrence records across 114 fish species, representing 30 families and 17 orders, with a temporal range from 1856 to 2024, organized into 39 columns. By supporting fish community conservation, invasive alien species monitoring, and climate impact assessments, this database provides a vital resource for developing evidence-based management strategies in the DRB.