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Occupancy and Detection of Clinch Dace Using Two Gear Types

期刊

JOURNAL OF FISH AND WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT
卷 8, 期 2, 页码 530-543

出版社

U S FISH & WILDLIFE SERVICE
DOI: 10.3996/022017-JFWM-017

关键词

clinch dace; occupancy; detection probability; sampling; monitoring; conservation

资金

  1. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service State Wildlife Grant

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The Clinch Dace Chrosomus sp. cf. saylori, discovered in 1999, is an undescribed headwater fish species of global conservation concern with a limited distribution in two counties in southwest Virginia. Highly efficient sampling gears are key to monitoring headwater fish assemblages in Appalachia, including those containing Clinch Dace. Additional information is needed regarding the habitat requirements of the species to understand responses to future mining and logging activities in the region. An occupancy modeling framework is useful to account for incomplete detection, with multiple sampling gears in presence-absence surveys for cryptic or rare species. We detected Clinch Dace at 13 of 70 sites. Occupancy corrected for imperfect detection probability did not differ from naive occupancy estimates and was 0.19. Clinch Dace occurred in streams with higher substrate embeddedness and catchment forest cover. Back-pack electrofishing had a 55% higher probability of detecting Clinch Dace in a 50-m subreach than minnow traps. Appropriate management actions for this species may focus on preserving forested cover in occupied watersheds and monitoring the future impact of surface mining activities that increase total dissolved solids. Sampling protocols for the imperiled Clinch Dace can incorporate both gears and adjust sampling effort to maximize species detection in specific habitats and with specific research goals.

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