Size-conditional smolting and the response of Carmel River steelhead to two decades of conservation efforts.

Threshold effects are common in ecosystems and can generate counterintuitive outcomes in management interventions. A threshold effect proposed for steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) is size-conditional smolting and marine survival. Steelhead are anadromous, maturing in the ocean but migrating to...

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Main Authors: Juan Lopez Arriaza, David A Boughton, Kevan Urquhart, Marc Mangel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5708832?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-e7ec595361f14393a09a36d66c59c95b2020-11-25T01:47:54ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-011211e018897110.1371/journal.pone.0188971Size-conditional smolting and the response of Carmel River steelhead to two decades of conservation efforts.Juan Lopez ArriazaDavid A BoughtonKevan UrquhartMarc MangelThreshold effects are common in ecosystems and can generate counterintuitive outcomes in management interventions. A threshold effect proposed for steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) is size-conditional smolting and marine survival. Steelhead are anadromous, maturing in the ocean but migrating to freshwater to spawn, where their offspring reside for one or more years before smolting-physiologically transforming to a saltwater form-and migrating to the ocean. In conditional smolting, juveniles transform only if growth exceeds a threshold body size prior to migration season, and subsequent marine survival correlates with size at ocean entry. Conditional smolting suggests that efforts to improve freshwater survival of juveniles may reduce smolt success if they increase competition and reduce growth. Using model-selection techniques, we asked if this effect explained declining numbers of adult Carmel River steelhead. This threatened population has been the focus of two decades of habitat restoration, as well as active translocation and captive-rearing of juveniles stranded in seasonally dewatered channels. In the top-ranked model selected by information-theoretic criteria, adult decline was linked to reduced juvenile growth rates in the lower river, consistent with the conditional smolting hypothesis. According to model inference, since 2005 most returning adult steelhead were captively-reared. However, a lower-ranked model without conditional smolting also had modest support, and suggested a negative effect of captive rearing. Translocations of juvenile fish to perennial reaches may have reduced the steelhead run slightly by raising competition, but this effect is confounded in the data with effects of river flow on growth. Efforts to recover Carmel River steelhead will probably be more successful if they focus on conditions promoting rapid growth in the river. Our analysis clearly favored a role for size-conditional smolting and marine survival in the decline of the population, but did not definitively rule out alternative explanations.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5708832?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Juan Lopez Arriaza
David A Boughton
Kevan Urquhart
Marc Mangel
spellingShingle Juan Lopez Arriaza
David A Boughton
Kevan Urquhart
Marc Mangel
Size-conditional smolting and the response of Carmel River steelhead to two decades of conservation efforts.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Juan Lopez Arriaza
David A Boughton
Kevan Urquhart
Marc Mangel
author_sort Juan Lopez Arriaza
title Size-conditional smolting and the response of Carmel River steelhead to two decades of conservation efforts.
title_short Size-conditional smolting and the response of Carmel River steelhead to two decades of conservation efforts.
title_full Size-conditional smolting and the response of Carmel River steelhead to two decades of conservation efforts.
title_fullStr Size-conditional smolting and the response of Carmel River steelhead to two decades of conservation efforts.
title_full_unstemmed Size-conditional smolting and the response of Carmel River steelhead to two decades of conservation efforts.
title_sort size-conditional smolting and the response of carmel river steelhead to two decades of conservation efforts.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Threshold effects are common in ecosystems and can generate counterintuitive outcomes in management interventions. A threshold effect proposed for steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) is size-conditional smolting and marine survival. Steelhead are anadromous, maturing in the ocean but migrating to freshwater to spawn, where their offspring reside for one or more years before smolting-physiologically transforming to a saltwater form-and migrating to the ocean. In conditional smolting, juveniles transform only if growth exceeds a threshold body size prior to migration season, and subsequent marine survival correlates with size at ocean entry. Conditional smolting suggests that efforts to improve freshwater survival of juveniles may reduce smolt success if they increase competition and reduce growth. Using model-selection techniques, we asked if this effect explained declining numbers of adult Carmel River steelhead. This threatened population has been the focus of two decades of habitat restoration, as well as active translocation and captive-rearing of juveniles stranded in seasonally dewatered channels. In the top-ranked model selected by information-theoretic criteria, adult decline was linked to reduced juvenile growth rates in the lower river, consistent with the conditional smolting hypothesis. According to model inference, since 2005 most returning adult steelhead were captively-reared. However, a lower-ranked model without conditional smolting also had modest support, and suggested a negative effect of captive rearing. Translocations of juvenile fish to perennial reaches may have reduced the steelhead run slightly by raising competition, but this effect is confounded in the data with effects of river flow on growth. Efforts to recover Carmel River steelhead will probably be more successful if they focus on conditions promoting rapid growth in the river. Our analysis clearly favored a role for size-conditional smolting and marine survival in the decline of the population, but did not definitively rule out alternative explanations.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5708832?pdf=render
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