Unlike rivers in northern Brazil where seasonal variations in water temperature generally are relatively limited, those in southern Brazil, such as Paraíba do Sul, exhibit distinct differences between winter and summer. During a survey of the river in
Lorena, São Paulo, the water varied from in the summer to in the winter. The
pH is neutral and generally fluctuates between 6 and 8. The Paraíba do Sul
basin is home to just above 100 native fish species with most in the families
Loricariidae,
Characidae and
Trichomycteridae. About 40% of the fish species in the river basin are
endemic (the genus
Oligobrycon is entirely restricted to the basin) As a consequence of flowing through one of the most densely populated and industrialised parts of Brazil, the Paraíba do Sul suffers from pollution. Studies of the native cichlid
Geophagus brasiliensis have found that levels of some
heavy metals exceed the limits set by the Brazilian Food Legislation. including 46 species of non-native fish and the parasitic copepod
Lernaea cyprinacea. Several native species (e.g.,
Brycon insignis, Pogonopoma parahybae) are seriously threatened, and a general fall in abundance and
species richness has been observed. The catfish
Potamarius grandoculis is only known from the vicinity of the mouth of the Paraíba do Sul and
Doce Rivers, but it may already be
extinct. Other threatened species in the Paraíba do Sul basin are the bivalves
Diplodon dunkerianus,
D. expansus and
D. fontaineanus, and the
Hoge's side-necked turtle (
Mesoclemmys hogei). A national conservation plan with recommendations for the river basin was published in 2010. == References ==