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Flow-Recruitment Relationships of Smallmouth Buffalo (Ictiobus bubalus) in Three Texas River BasinsReeves, Cole Griffin 08 1900 (has links)
This project focused on the relationship between instream flows and smallmouth buffalo (Ictiobus bubalus) recruitment in the Gulf Coastal Plain of Texas. The flow regime is the dominant factor in lotic systems and, consequently, the relationship between instream flows, including impacts to natural flow regimes, and life-history is a subject of growing interest. Smallmouth buffalo is a good model to investigate the relationship between river flows and variable interannual recruitment success of periodic life-history strategist fish species. Smallmouth buffalo were collected from the Brazos, Colorado, and Guadalupe Rivers of Texas, U.S.A., and otoliths were extracted from individuals in the field and sectioned and photographed in the lab. Photographs of sectioned otoliths were used to estimate age and thus the year in which the individual was spawned by counting back from the time of capture. Population age structure (i.e. a ‘state' or condition at a point in time) was used to infer effects of flow variation on a rates-based process (i.e. recruitment). After controlling for mortality using recruitment index values, interannual variation in recruitment was modeled using multiple components of the flow regime quantified as indicators of hydrologic alteration (IHA) variables based on daily discharge data from USGS gaging stations in each river system. Model selection followed a two-tier approach, first fitting models using only flow attributes associated with the spawning season then adding additional informative parameters from the pre-spawn and post-spawn periods. The primary finding from model selection was that duration of high flow pulses during the spawning season is a critical component of the flow regime associated with successful Smallmouth Buffalo recruitment. These findings have implications for river management and conservation of ecological integrity, in particular populations of periodic life-history strategist species.
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Ecology of sympatric catostomid fishes in a glaciated riverine system: habitat, food, and biogeographyNelson, C. Patrick A. H. 13 October 2005 (has links)
Several hypotheses from community ecology were tested using habitat and diet patterns for six catostomid fishes of the Assiniboine River, Manitoba. Specifically, I examined expected assemblage patterns based on the equilibrium-nonequilibrium continuum that are based on competition as a structuring mechanism. The catostomid assemblage showed characteristics of both equilibrium and nonequilibrium assemblages. Habitat utilization was not proportional to habitat availability for depth, velocity, and substrate indicating habitat selection occurs. These patterns are influenced by the distributions of soft Lake Agassiz deposits and harder glacial till-plain habitats and therefore localized. Species co-occurred in relation to abundance indicating negative associations assumed in competition-based theory were not apparent. In addition, species from the same subfamily co-occurred more often than expected by chance, indicating positive within-group comparisons, except for silver redhorse, which did not co-occur differently than random. Species from the same feeding group co-occur most frequently with conspecifics, indicating species have specific habitat patterns. Benthic invertebrate distributions and fish distributions were positively correlated with fish diet. Within-feeding-group comparisons indicated species that co-occurred frequently consumed the same food items, but showed subtle differences in abundance of diet items. The most common diet items varied among white sucker, silver redhorse, golden redhorse, and shorthead redhorse, indicating that, although these species co-occur, subtle differences in feeding behavior may account for differences in relative abundance and frequency of diet items. Quillback and bigmouth buffalo shared a few core food items, but co-occurred infrequently. Inter-specific interactions showed silver redhorse diets were a subset of white sucker diets, white sucker diets were a subset of golden redhorse diets, shorthead redhorse diets were a subset of silver redhorse and golden redhorse diets, while bigmouth buffalo diets were a subset of quillback diets. Lower richness and prevalence of organisms in quillback and bigmouth buffalo diets were due to highly aggregated prey items. Benthic invertebrate distributions were aggregated and dependent on the predictable patterns of substrates, based on hydraulic sorting in the meandering along the river. Large-scale redundancy of species-habitat associations was correlated with historical (phylogenetic) or adaptive (morphological) constraints on habitat selection. Stream habitats are constrained by regional factors of slope and sediments, but also determined by stable, repetitive and predictable local processes of erosion, transport, and deposition (meandering). The fish-habitat associations of catostomids in the Assiniboine River provide an example of interaction between the abundance of the component species, the phylogenetic constraints on the niche, and the deterministic nature of the spatial distribution of habitats. Within-feeding-group pairs showed that local habitat overlap is positively correlated with geographic overlap, while local diet overlap is negatively correlated with geographic overlap. Two species pairs (silver redhorse and golden redhorse and bigmouth buffalo and quillback) were concluded to have symmetric overlaps at the geographic scale and stable interactions. Using the functional niche concept ecological theory provides a link between ecology and biogeography of sympatric species. The multi-analytical approaches in this study provide insights into the structuring of north temperate prairie river fish communities, through hypothesis testing and correlation that have application beyond Prairie Rivers. / October 2005
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Ecology of sympatric catostomid fishes in a glaciated riverine system: habitat, food, and biogeographyNelson, C. Patrick A. H. 13 October 2005 (has links)
Several hypotheses from community ecology were tested using habitat and diet patterns for six catostomid fishes of the Assiniboine River, Manitoba. Specifically, I examined expected assemblage patterns based on the equilibrium-nonequilibrium continuum that are based on competition as a structuring mechanism. The catostomid assemblage showed characteristics of both equilibrium and nonequilibrium assemblages. Habitat utilization was not proportional to habitat availability for depth, velocity, and substrate indicating habitat selection occurs. These patterns are influenced by the distributions of soft Lake Agassiz deposits and harder glacial till-plain habitats and therefore localized. Species co-occurred in relation to abundance indicating negative associations assumed in competition-based theory were not apparent. In addition, species from the same subfamily co-occurred more often than expected by chance, indicating positive within-group comparisons, except for silver redhorse, which did not co-occur differently than random. Species from the same feeding group co-occur most frequently with conspecifics, indicating species have specific habitat patterns. Benthic invertebrate distributions and fish distributions were positively correlated with fish diet. Within-feeding-group comparisons indicated species that co-occurred frequently consumed the same food items, but showed subtle differences in abundance of diet items. The most common diet items varied among white sucker, silver redhorse, golden redhorse, and shorthead redhorse, indicating that, although these species co-occur, subtle differences in feeding behavior may account for differences in relative abundance and frequency of diet items. Quillback and bigmouth buffalo shared a few core food items, but co-occurred infrequently. Inter-specific interactions showed silver redhorse diets were a subset of white sucker diets, white sucker diets were a subset of golden redhorse diets, shorthead redhorse diets were a subset of silver redhorse and golden redhorse diets, while bigmouth buffalo diets were a subset of quillback diets. Lower richness and prevalence of organisms in quillback and bigmouth buffalo diets were due to highly aggregated prey items. Benthic invertebrate distributions were aggregated and dependent on the predictable patterns of substrates, based on hydraulic sorting in the meandering along the river. Large-scale redundancy of species-habitat associations was correlated with historical (phylogenetic) or adaptive (morphological) constraints on habitat selection. Stream habitats are constrained by regional factors of slope and sediments, but also determined by stable, repetitive and predictable local processes of erosion, transport, and deposition (meandering). The fish-habitat associations of catostomids in the Assiniboine River provide an example of interaction between the abundance of the component species, the phylogenetic constraints on the niche, and the deterministic nature of the spatial distribution of habitats. Within-feeding-group pairs showed that local habitat overlap is positively correlated with geographic overlap, while local diet overlap is negatively correlated with geographic overlap. Two species pairs (silver redhorse and golden redhorse and bigmouth buffalo and quillback) were concluded to have symmetric overlaps at the geographic scale and stable interactions. Using the functional niche concept ecological theory provides a link between ecology and biogeography of sympatric species. The multi-analytical approaches in this study provide insights into the structuring of north temperate prairie river fish communities, through hypothesis testing and correlation that have application beyond Prairie Rivers.
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Ecology of sympatric catostomid fishes in a glaciated riverine system: habitat, food, and biogeographyNelson, C. Patrick A. H. 13 October 2005 (has links)
Several hypotheses from community ecology were tested using habitat and diet patterns for six catostomid fishes of the Assiniboine River, Manitoba. Specifically, I examined expected assemblage patterns based on the equilibrium-nonequilibrium continuum that are based on competition as a structuring mechanism. The catostomid assemblage showed characteristics of both equilibrium and nonequilibrium assemblages. Habitat utilization was not proportional to habitat availability for depth, velocity, and substrate indicating habitat selection occurs. These patterns are influenced by the distributions of soft Lake Agassiz deposits and harder glacial till-plain habitats and therefore localized. Species co-occurred in relation to abundance indicating negative associations assumed in competition-based theory were not apparent. In addition, species from the same subfamily co-occurred more often than expected by chance, indicating positive within-group comparisons, except for silver redhorse, which did not co-occur differently than random. Species from the same feeding group co-occur most frequently with conspecifics, indicating species have specific habitat patterns. Benthic invertebrate distributions and fish distributions were positively correlated with fish diet. Within-feeding-group comparisons indicated species that co-occurred frequently consumed the same food items, but showed subtle differences in abundance of diet items. The most common diet items varied among white sucker, silver redhorse, golden redhorse, and shorthead redhorse, indicating that, although these species co-occur, subtle differences in feeding behavior may account for differences in relative abundance and frequency of diet items. Quillback and bigmouth buffalo shared a few core food items, but co-occurred infrequently. Inter-specific interactions showed silver redhorse diets were a subset of white sucker diets, white sucker diets were a subset of golden redhorse diets, shorthead redhorse diets were a subset of silver redhorse and golden redhorse diets, while bigmouth buffalo diets were a subset of quillback diets. Lower richness and prevalence of organisms in quillback and bigmouth buffalo diets were due to highly aggregated prey items. Benthic invertebrate distributions were aggregated and dependent on the predictable patterns of substrates, based on hydraulic sorting in the meandering along the river. Large-scale redundancy of species-habitat associations was correlated with historical (phylogenetic) or adaptive (morphological) constraints on habitat selection. Stream habitats are constrained by regional factors of slope and sediments, but also determined by stable, repetitive and predictable local processes of erosion, transport, and deposition (meandering). The fish-habitat associations of catostomids in the Assiniboine River provide an example of interaction between the abundance of the component species, the phylogenetic constraints on the niche, and the deterministic nature of the spatial distribution of habitats. Within-feeding-group pairs showed that local habitat overlap is positively correlated with geographic overlap, while local diet overlap is negatively correlated with geographic overlap. Two species pairs (silver redhorse and golden redhorse and bigmouth buffalo and quillback) were concluded to have symmetric overlaps at the geographic scale and stable interactions. Using the functional niche concept ecological theory provides a link between ecology and biogeography of sympatric species. The multi-analytical approaches in this study provide insights into the structuring of north temperate prairie river fish communities, through hypothesis testing and correlation that have application beyond Prairie Rivers.
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