Local Variability Mediates Vulnerability of Trout Populations to Land Use and Climate Change
Authored by Steven F Railsback, Jason B Dunham, Brooke E Penaluna, Ivan Arismendi, Sherri L Johnson, Robert E Bilby, Mohammad Safeeq, Arne E Skaugset
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0135334
Sponsors:
United States Geological Survey (USGS)
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Science to Achieve Results (STAR)
U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service
American Fisheries Society
Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center
Platforms:
inSTREAM
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
http://www2.humboldt.edu/ecomodel/instream.htm
Abstract
Land use and climate change occur simultaneously around the globe. Fully
understanding their separate and combined effects requires a mechanistic
understanding at the local scale where their effects are ultimately
realized. Here we applied an individual-based model of fish population
dynamics to evaluate the role of local stream variability in modifying
responses of Coastal Cutthroat Trout (Oncorhynchus clarkii clarkii) to
scenarios simulating identical changes in temperature and stream flows
linked to forest harvest, climate change, and their combined effects
over six decades. We parameterized the model for four neighboring
streams located in a forested headwater catchment in northwestern
Oregon, USA with multi-year, daily measurements of stream temperature, flow, and turbidity (20072011), and field measurements of both instream
habitat structure and three years of annual trout population estimates.
Model simulations revealed that variability in habitat conditions among
streams (depth, available habitat) mediated the effects of forest
harvest and climate change. Net effects for most simulated trout
responses were different from or less than the sum of their separate
scenarios. In some cases, forest harvest countered the effects of
climate change through increased summer flow. Climate change most
strongly influenced trout (earlier fry emergence, reductions in biomass
of older trout, increased biomass of young-of-year), but these changes
did not consistently translate into reductions in biomass over time.
Forest harvest, in contrast, produced fewer and less consistent
responses in trout. Earlier fry emergence driven by climate change was
the most consistent simulated response, whereas survival, growth, and
biomass were inconsistent. Overall our findings indicate a host of local
processes can strongly influence how populations respond to broad scale
effects of land use and climate change.
Tags
models
United-states
Responses
Change impacts
Cutthroat trout
British-columbia
Long-term trends
Stream temperatures
Species
abundance
Forest harvest