4.3 Article

Demographic changes following mechanical removal of exotic brown trout in an Intermountain West (USA), high-elevation stream

期刊

ECOLOGY OF FRESHWATER FISH
卷 24, 期 2, 页码 252-263

出版社

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/eff.12143

关键词

mechanical removal; population response; density dependence; Salmo trutta; invasive species

资金

  1. US. Geological Survey Western Region State Partnership Program [G10AC00507]
  2. UDWR, Endangered Species Mitigation Fund [1111]
  3. US Forest Service
  4. U.S. Geological Survey
  5. Utah Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit at Utah State University
  6. Ecology Center (USU)
  7. Intermountain Center for River Rehabilitation and Restoration at USU
  8. Cache Anglers Chapter of Trout Unlimited

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Exotic species present a great threat to native fish conservation; however, eradicating exotics is expensive and often impractical. Mechanical removal can be ineffective for eradication, but nonetheless may increase management effectiveness by identifying portions of a watershed that are strong sources of exotics. We used mechanical removal to understand processes driving exotic brown trout (Salmo trutta) populations in the Logan River, Utah. Our goals were to: (i) evaluate the demographic response of brown trout to mechanical removal, (ii) identify sources of brown trout recruitment at a watershed scale and (iii) evaluate whether mechanical removal can reduce brown trout densities. We removed brown trout from 2km of the Logan River (4174 fish), and 5.6km of Right Hand Fork (RHF, 15,245 fish), a low-elevation tributary, using single-pass electrofishing. We compared fish abundance and size distributions prior to, and after 2years of mechanical removal. In the Logan River, immigration to the removal reach and high natural variability in fish abundances limited the response to mechanical removal. In contrast, mechanical removal in RHF resulted in a strong recruitment pulse, shifting the size distribution towards smaller fish. These results suggest that, before removal, density-dependent mortality or emigration of juvenile fish stabilised adult populations and may have provided a source of juveniles to the main stem. Overall, in sites demonstrating strong density-dependent population regulation, or near sources of exotics, short-term mechanical removal has limited effects on brown trout populations but may help identify factors governing populations and inform large-scale management of exotic species.

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