Watershed-scale dispersal patterns of juvenile Chinook Salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) revealed through genetic parentage analysis.

IF 3.4 1区 生物学 Q2 ECOLOGY
Matthew J Kaylor, Lindsy R Ciepiela, Melody Feden, Joseph T Lemanski, Casey Justice, Benjamin A Staton, Jonathan B Armstrong, Stefan Kelly, Shawn R Narum, Ian A Tattam, Seth M White
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: For many aquatic taxa, juvenile dispersal from spawning locations to rearing habitats is a critical process influencing individual fitness and population dynamics. However, our understanding of dispersal patterns in naturally spawning fish populations remains largely unknown due to the logistical challenges of tagging and tracking movement at early life stages.

Methods: We quantified dispersal patterns of a spring-run Chinook Salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) population in NE Oregon, USA using genetic parentage-based tagging to trace juveniles captured from summer rearing habitats back to their maternal parent and associated spawning location (i.e., juvenile origin). We evaluated overall dispersal patterns, longitudinal trends across the watershed, and relationships between dispersal and biophysical factors, including thermal conditions, network-scale abundance estimates, and juvenile size-at-capture.

Results: Overall dispersal of the 1326 juveniles (n sampled = 3388) assigned to a maternal parent (n = 64) was downstream-biased, but we estimated that 32% dispersed upstream and 29% moved into adjacent tributaries after initial mainstem dispersal. Dispersal distances were high relative to those found in other studies, with 25% of parr dispersing more than 0.9 km upstream (max = 10.6 km) and 25% dispersing more than 3.7 km downstream (max = 28.6 km). Analysis of dispersal patterns and potential drivers indicated that (1) dispersal distances, directional bias, and variability showed clear longitudinal trends from downstream to upstream origin locations, (2) temperature was a dominant driver of dispersal, with individuals originating from warmer sections of the mainstem typically moving to cooler mainstem sections or tributaries, and (3) dispersal distance was associated with larger size-at-capture for individuals that dispersed downstream, but not upstream.

Conclusions: The widespread dispersal patterns exhibited in this population, including moving considerable distances upstream, downstream, and into tributaries, suggests that dispersal in naturally spawning fish populations may be more extensive and variable than currently recognized. We found that heterogeneity in biophysical conditions shaped within-population variability and riverscape dispersal patterns with important implications for subsequent fish habitat use, distribution, and size. This study provides an approach to evaluate patterns and drivers of dispersal in naturally spawning populations and inform conservation and restoration planning through better alignment with juvenile fish ecology.

通过遗传亲本分析揭示了奇努克鲑鱼幼鱼在流域尺度上的扩散模式。
背景:对于许多水生类群来说,幼鱼从产卵地到饲养地的扩散是影响个体适应性和种群动态的关键过程。然而,我们对自然产卵鱼类种群的传播模式的理解在很大程度上仍然未知,因为在生命早期阶段标记和跟踪运动的后勤挑战。方法:采用基于遗传亲代标记的方法,对美国俄勒冈州东北部一个春季洄游的奇努克鲑鱼(Oncorhynchus tshawytscha)种群的扩散模式进行量化,追踪从夏季饲养栖息地捕获的幼鱼,并将其返回到其母本及其相关的产卵地点(即幼鱼起源)。我们评估了整个流域的总体扩散模式、纵向趋势,以及扩散与生物物理因素之间的关系,包括热条件、网络尺度丰度估计和幼鱼捕获尺寸。结果:在1326只幼鱼(n = 3388)中,母鱼(n = 64)的总体扩散倾向于下游,但我们估计32%的幼鱼在最初的主干道扩散后向上游扩散,29%的幼鱼迁移到邻近的支流。与其他研究相比,该研究的扩散距离较大,25%的parr向上游扩散超过0.9 km(最大= 10.6 km), 25%的parr向下游扩散超过3.7 km(最大= 28.6 km)。对扩散模式和潜在驱动因素的分析表明:(1)扩散距离、方向偏差和变异显示出从下游到上游起源地点的明显纵向趋势;(2)温度是扩散的主要驱动因素,来自主干线较温暖区域的个体通常会迁移到较冷的主干线区域或支流;(3)扩散距离与下游分散的个体的捕获尺寸较大相关。但上游没有。结论:该种群中广泛的扩散模式,包括向上游、下游和支流移动相当长的距离,表明自然产卵鱼类种群的扩散可能比目前认识到的更广泛和更多变。我们发现,生物物理条件的异质性塑造了种群内的变异和河流景观的扩散模式,对随后鱼类栖息地的利用、分布和大小具有重要意义。该研究提供了一种评估自然产卵种群扩散模式和驱动因素的方法,并通过更好地与幼鱼生态相结合,为保护和恢复规划提供信息。
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来源期刊
Movement Ecology
Movement Ecology Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
CiteScore
6.60
自引率
4.90%
发文量
47
审稿时长
23 weeks
期刊介绍: Movement Ecology is an open-access interdisciplinary journal publishing novel insights from empirical and theoretical approaches into the ecology of movement of the whole organism - either animals, plants or microorganisms - as the central theme. We welcome manuscripts on any taxa and any movement phenomena (e.g. foraging, dispersal and seasonal migration) addressing important research questions on the patterns, mechanisms, causes and consequences of organismal movement. Manuscripts will be rigorously peer-reviewed to ensure novelty and high quality.
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