River restoration effects on steelhead populations in the Manistee River, Michigan: Analysis using an individual-based model
Authored by Edward S Rutherford, Jeffrey A Tyler
Date Published: 2007
DOI: 10.1577/t06-147.1
Sponsors:
Great Lakes Fishery Trust
Great Lakes Protection Fund
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The Manistee River, Michigan, watershed includes two dams as well as
residential and agricultural development, and the river itself contains
a sizeable population of steelhead Oncorhynchus mykiss that supports a
valuable recreational fishery. Restoration of the Manistee River and its
flow regime may improve steelhead habitat and the fishery. We developed
an individual-based model of steelhead in the Manistee River to assess
the population effects of changes in the number of spawners, water
discharge from Tippy Dam, and water temperature. The model follows
steelhead from spring spawning to the end of the growing season in early
fall and depicts the river environment as a series of cells that vary in
dimension, water velocity, and substrate. Simulated water discharge, temperature, and prey availability changed daily based on observations
from Tippy Dam. Empirically based models describe individual steelhead
fry and parr foraging and growth. In the model, steelhead select
habitats and maximize individual fitness while accounting for dominance
and the availability of feeding territories. We calibrated the model to
replicate fish growth, mortality, and population size. Simulation
experiments manipulated the number of spawning females, water discharge, and water temperature. The results suggest that Manistee River steelhead
incur density limitations in the fry and parr stages and that water
discharge and temperature changes affect the number and biomass of parr.
Increasing river discharge negatively affected parr numbers and weight.
Decreasing maximum midsummer temperature increased parr numbers and
weight when the change was large, but otherwise had little effect. These
results indicate that restoration of the natural flow regime in the
Manistee River will probably increase the quality of the habitat for
steelhead but that density limitations in the fry and parr stages may
ultimately limit population growth.
Tags
Survival
Streams
Territory size
Oncorhynchus-mykiss
Habitat selection
Rainbow-trout
Salmo-gairdneri
Altered flow regimes
Fish abundance
Egg pocket