Assessing temporal variation and autocorrelation in fish habitat use
Authored by L Vilizzi, GH Copp, JM Roussel
Date Published: 2005
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Abstract
We assessed the extent of temporal variation and autocorrelation in fish
habitat use based on an experimental study of individual 0+ juvenile
barbel, Barbus barbus, in an artificial flume. Five treated and five
control fish were individually subjected to an increase in discharge
(intervention) halfway through each experiment and kept at baseline
discharge throughout, respectively. Preference curves for velocity were
generated for each of 60 trials per experiment and for each combination
of treated/control (fish) x before/after-intervention. There were large
between- and within-individual differences in velocity preference, both
in treated and in control fish. Most barbel explored the entire range of
velocities, whereas some individuals used a more limited range. Temporal
variation in behavioural responses was assessed by a PCA-based
methodology. Autocorrelation (i.e. correlation between sequential
trials) was diagnosed in most response profiles, supporting recent
findings that individuals may have a `memory' of their past velocity
usage. The relevance of the results for numerical habitat models of fish
habitat assessment is discussed, as well as the importance of
incorporating temporal variability into fish habitat use models (e.g.
PHABSIM), not only as ontogenetic intervals but also as longitudinal
data of individual behaviours. A warning is also re-issued about the
erroneous belief of `pseudoreplication' simply arising from repeated
measurements in time.
Tags
behavior
River
Brown trout
Stream
Hydropeaking
Salar
Atlantic salmon parr
Suitability curves
Physical habitat
Flow assessment