Growing pressures from development activities, on aquatic environments in
South American countries, have created an urgent need for tools to measure
the quality of aquatic systems. The index of biotic integrity, based on fish
assemblages, elaborated in North America, constitutes a basis for the
development of these tools. However, its direct application is problematic
in regions having a rich and diverse ichthyofauna and where the knowledge of
fish species ecology is incomplete. The response of taxonomic or trophic
groups is often unknown and the selection of fish assemblage metrics cannot
be based on previous knowledge, as in intensely studied regions. This work
proposes a method, similar to the approach recently pursued in Europe, based
on comparing the variability of fish assemblages in reference situations
with their variability influenced by human-induced perturbations. The method
was developed from 53 samples of 27 reaches in 7 hydrographic basins of
French Guiana. For each of 28 fish assemblage descriptors, stepwise multiple
linear regressions with 28 habitat variables were carried out. The residuals
of the models obtained were used as candidate metrics independent of natural
environmental factors. Nine metrics showing significant differences between
reference and disturbed samples were selected to constitute the index. The
index was validated by analysing a temporal data series obtained from a
reach disturbed by dam construction.