Summer temperature regimes in southcentral Alaska streams: watershed drivers of variation and potential implications for Pacific salmon
Author(s) -
Sue Mauger,
Rebecca Shaftel,
Jason C. Leppi,
Daniel J. Rinella
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
canadian journal of fisheries and aquatic sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.09
H-Index - 153
eISSN - 1205-7533
pISSN - 0706-652X
DOI - 10.1139/cjfas-2016-0076
Subject(s) - streams , watershed , environmental science , inlet , range (aeronautics) , elevation (ballistics) , plateau (mathematics) , hydrology (agriculture) , structural basin , latitude , wetland , physical geography , geography , ecology , oceanography , geology , biology , computer network , mathematical analysis , paleontology , materials science , geometry , mathematics , geotechnical engineering , geodesy , machine learning , computer science , composite material
Climate is changing fastest in high-latitude regions, focusing our research on understanding rates and drivers of changing temperature regimes in southcentral Alaska streams and implications for salmon populations. We collected continuous water and air temperature data during open-water periods from 2008 to 2012 in 48 nonglacial salmon streams across the Cook Inlet basin spanning a range of watershed characteristics. The most important predictors of maximum temperatures, expressed as mean July temperature, maximum weekly average temperature, and maximum weekly maximum temperature (MWMT), were mean elevation and wetland cover, while thermal sensitivity (slope of the stream–air temperature relationship) was best explained by mean elevation and area. Although maximum stream temperatures varied widely between years and across sites (8.4 to 23.7 °C), MWMT at most sites exceeded established criterion for spawning and incubation (13 °C), above which chronic and sublethal effects become likely, every year of the ...
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