Legacy effects of wildfire on stream thermal regimes and rainbow trout ecology: an integrated analysis of observation and individual-based models
Authored by Steven F Railsback, Amanda E Rosenberger, Jason B Dunham, Jason R Neuswanger
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1086/683338
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Abstract
Management of aquatic resources in fire-prone areas requires
understanding of fish species' responses to wildfire and of the
intermediate- and long-term consequences of these disturbances. We
examined Rainbow Trout populations in 9 headwater streams 10 y after a
major wildfire: 3 with no history of severe wildfire in the watershed
(unburned), 3 in severely burned watersheds (burned), and 3 in severely
burned watersheds subjected to immediate events that scoured the stream
channel and eliminated streamside vegetation (burned and reorganized).
Results of a previous study of this system suggested the primary lasting
effects of this wildfire history on headwater stream habitat were
differences in canopy cover and solar radiation, which led to higher
summer stream temperatures. Nevertheless, trout were present throughout
streams in burned watersheds. Older age classes were least abundant in
streams draining watersheds with a burned and reorganized history, and
individuals >1 y old were most abundant in streams draining watersheds
with an unburned history. Burned history corresponded with fast growth, low lipid content, and early maturity of Rainbow Trout. We used an
individual-based model of Rainbow Trout growth and demographic patterns
to determine if temperature interactions with bioenergetics and
competition among individuals could lead to observed phenotypic and
ecological differences among populations in the absence of other
plausible mechanisms. Modeling suggested that moderate warming
associated with wildfire and channel disturbance history leads to faster
individual growth, which exacerbates competition for limited food, leading to decreases in population densities. The inferred mechanisms
from this modeling exercise suggest the transferability of ecological
patterns to a variety of temperature-warming scenarios.
Tags
habitat
Climate-change
Temperature
River
Fish
Territory size
Oncorhynchus-mykiss
Maturation
Latitudinal variation
Steelhead
trout