RESUMO
River connectivity is essential for the resilience of fish assemblages and populations and is a priority goal to reach good ecological status for river systems. Increasing knowledge on the functionality of restoration tools such as fishways is relevant for future management strategies. The present two-year assessment showed clear ecological contributions of different types of multispecies fishways in the fish assemblage of a strongly modified Mediterranean-type river. Just after their implementation, early and extended use by dominant river-resident fish of both naturelike and technical fishways were observed. All fishways were used in different seasons, especially during the migratory periods by potamodromous cyprinids, suggesting a possible use as migration corridors. Fishways also may provide compensatory habitats for small and juvenile individuals throughout the annual cycles, mostly for rheophilic fish inside nature-like bypasses and for limnophilics inside technical types. Fluvial habitat characteristics and lower flow variability inside the fishways could favour their role as a fish refuge, mainly to juveniles of cyprinids, in heavily regulated rivers where large flow fluctuations occurred. Nature-like fishways could be a better option to function as a compensatory habitat for rheophilic cyprinids in Mediterranean-type Rivers, even more because their use by large nonnative limnophilics seems to be very scarce. However, technical fishways could offer the opportunity to establish control traps of some nonnative fish, which could be of interest to reduce the risk of spreading invasive fish. Therefore, fish ecology and local hydrology should drive the decision between the types to implement. The obtained information on the ecological functionality of multispecies fishways should be considered for applying successful river restorations that are demanded by water and wildlife management schemes (e.g., the European Water Framework Directive).