The fellow has obtained a multidisciplinary set of research and transferable skills through high quality training to pursue his long-term career goal (i.e. become an independent scientist or research professor). The fellow has been directly involved in grant proposal and publications writing, teaching activities, networking opportunities, participation in inter-disciplinary projects, contribution to organization of conference sessions, transferable skills training and career development at KU Leuven, supervision of technical staff and students, and participation in editorial and review schemes. All these skills have enabled the fellow to reach a suitable starting point for setting up his own independent research career. The AQUAHYDRO project also had an impact by attracting new collaborations to the host research group, and for the fellow’s career, especially regarding the analysis of hydrogen isotopes.
The results of our project are expected to contain relevant management implications for tropical aquatic systems. In the case of the Congo River dataset, our results point towards a high diversity in trophic resource specialization within fish communities, but also towards an overall important role of terrestrial food sources for aquatic consumers. Hence, given the importance of fisheries to support riparian human populations, acknowledging the importance of terrestrial sources and an adequate management of riparian habitats is an important management implication. For the Lake Edward study, data analysis is still in progress but here too we expect our data and the HIPE project results in more general terms to be potentially highly relevant from a management perspective: Lake Edward is an extremely important source of dietary protein for the human population, and is an integral part of the Queen Elizabeth and Virunga National Parks (Uganda & DRC, respectively). A decline in fisheries yield has been reported, and is of major concern for food supply and local stability – a solid understanding of the energetic support of the fish food web, and of the underlying mechanisms that have led to this decline is of high importance for future fisheries management.