Simulated juvenile salmon growth and phenology respond to altered thermal regimes and stream network shape
Authored by Brian J Burke, Joshua J Lawler, Joseph L Ebersole, Aimee H Fullerton, Christian E Torgersen, Scott G Leibowitz
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.2052
Sponsors:
United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
It is generally accepted that climate change will stress coldwater
species such as Pacific salmon. However, it is unclear what aspect of
altered thermal regimes (e.g., warmer winters, springs, summers, or
increased variability) will have the greatest effect, and what role the
spatial properties of river networks play. Thermally diverse habitats
may afford protection from climate change by providing opportunities for
aquatic organisms to find and use habitats with optimal conditions for
growth. We hypothesized that climate-altered thermal regimes will change
growth and timing of life history events such as emergence or migration
but that changes will be moderated in topologically complex stream
networks where opportunities to thermoregulate are more readily
available to mobile animals. Because climate change effects on
populations are spatially variable and contingent upon physiological
optima, assessments of risk must take a spatially explicit approach. We
developed a spatially structured individual-based model for Chinook
Salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) in which movement decisions and growth
were governed by water temperature and conspecific density. We evaluated
growth and phenology (timing of egg emergence and smolting) under a
variety of thermal regimes (each having a different minimum, rate of
warming, maximum, and variability) and in three network shapes of
increasing spatial complexity. Across networks, fish generally grew
faster and were capable of smolting earlier in warmer scenarios where
water temperatures experienced by fish were closer to optimal; however,
growth decreased for some fish. We found that salmon size and smolt date
responded more strongly to warmer springs and summers than to warmer
winters or increased variability. Fish in the least complex network grew
faster and were ready to smolt earlier than fish in the more spatially
complex network shapes in the contemporary thermal regime; patterns were
similar but less clear in warmer thermal regimes. Our results
demonstrate that network topology may influence how fish respond to
thermal landscapes, and this information will be useful for
incorporating a spatiotemporal context into conservation decisions that
promote long-term viability of salmon in a changing climate.
Tags
Individual-based model
Climate change
Atlantic salmon
Climate-change
Brown trout
Brook trout
Chinook salmon
Pacific salmon
Oncorhynchus-tshawytscha
Life-history variation
Fall chinook salmon
Network
topology
Thermal heterogeneity
Water temperature regimes