Assessing the habitat requirements of stream fishes: An overview and evaluation of different approaches
Authored by J Rosenfeld
Date Published: 2003
DOI: 10.1577/t01-126
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Abstract
With the widespread decline and endangerment of freshwater fishes, there
is a need to clearly define habitat requirements for effective species
management and habitat restoration. Fish biologists often infer habitat
requirements on the basis of correlative habitat associations in the
wild. This generates descriptive models that predict species presence or
abundance at a hierarchy of scales: distributional (macrohabitat) models
predict the presence/absence of species at large scales, capacity models
predict the abundance at the reach or channel unit scale when a species
is present, and microhabitat models predict the distribution of
individual fish at smaller spatial scales (e.g., instream habitat
suitability Curves for velocity, depth, and substrate). However, relationships based on habitat associations in the wild rarely give
definitive insight into the absolute requirement for a particular
habitat (i.e.. necessity of a habitat for the persistence of individuals
and Populations). The assumption that habitat selection accurately
reflects the fitness consequences of habitat use is rarely validated;
more rigorous assessment of habitat requirement Usually involves
manipulative experiments or measurements of fitness (individual growth, survival. or reproductive Success) in different habitat types.
Bioenergetic habitat models offer a promising mechanistic alternative to
correlative habitat suitability models for drift-feeding, fish and have
the potential to predict habitat-specific growth rates on the basis of
swimming costs and energy intake. Once smaller-scale habitat
requirements of individuals ire well defined, the final step is to
determine when and how the requirements of individuals limit
populations. Extrapolating smaller-scale habitat requirements to the
Population level requires either large-scale (ecosystem) manipulations
of habitat, adaptive management, or habitat-explicit population models.
For species with distinct ontogenic shifts in habitat requirements, the
concept of optimal habitat ratios may be useful for identifying limiting
habitat factors and defining baselines for habitat restoration.
Defining, optimal habitat configurations for different species may also
provide a basis for predicting how habitat change differentially affects
species with contrasting habitat needs.
Tags
Individual-based model
Atlantic salmon
Species distributions
Fresh-water
Salmon oncorhynchus-kisutch
Microhabitat use
Drift-feeding
salmonids
Incremental methodology
Juvenile cutthroat trout
Coho
salmon