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Long‐Term Demographic Responses of Trout Populations to Habitat Manipulation in Six Colorado Streams
Author(s) -
Gowan Charles,
Fausch Kurt D.
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
ecological applications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.864
H-Index - 213
eISSN - 1939-5582
pISSN - 1051-0761
DOI - 10.2307/2269496
Subject(s) - trout , streams , habitat , abundance (ecology) , biomass (ecology) , ecology , population , biology , brown trout , substrate (aquarium) , fishery , fish <actinopterygii> , demography , computer network , computer science , sociology
Fish communities in high‐elevation, Rocky Mountain streams consist of only one or a few trout species, so these streams are ideal for quantifying how physical habitat manipulation influences population biology. Managers often alter habitat structure in hopes of increasing the number of size of fish in a population, but this practice has not been rigorously evaluated, and the mechanisms involved are not well understood. We measured fish abundance and habitat conditions in each half of 500‐m study reaches in six streams for 2 yr before and 6 yr after installing 10 low log weirs in a randomly designated half (treatment section). Mean depth, pool volume, total cover, and the proportion of fine substrate particles in the stream bed increased in treatment sections within 1 to 2 years, whereas habitat in adjacent controls remained unchanged. Abundance and biomass of adult fish, but not juveniles, increased in treatments relative to controls in all streams. Recaptures of trout that were individually tagged and others that were batch marked revealed that immigration was primarily responsible for increased adult abundance and biomass, whereas no biologically significant differences occurred for recruitment, survival, or growth. Few (<5%) immigrants to treatment sections came from adjacent controls, indicating that the increased adult abundance did not result simply from fish redistributing within the study reach, but was caused instead by immigration from beyond the reach boundaries. Immigration to control sections was frequent as well, leading us to conclude that fish movement was common, contrary to most literature on stream trout. We also detected a high degree of concordance in fish abundance fluctuations within and among streams, suggesting that regional factors influenced fish populations over large spatial scales. Our research shows that log weirs increase trout abundance, but only if other management activities assure that fish dispersal remains unimpeded within the drainage.

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