Influence of hydrologic attributes on brown trout recruitment in low-latitude range margins |
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Authors: | Graciela G. Nicola Ana Almodóvar Benigno Elvira |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Castilla-La Mancha, 45071 Toledo, Spain;(2) Department of Zoology, Faculty of Biology, Complutense University of Madrid, 28040 Madrid, Spain |
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Abstract: | Factors controlling brown trout Salmo trutta recruitment in Mediterranean areas are largely unknown, despite the relevance this may have for fisheries management. The
effect of hydrological variability on survival of young brown trout was studied during seven consecutive years in five resident
populations from the southern range of the species distribution. Recruit density at the end of summer varied markedly among
year-classes and rivers during the study period. Previous work showed that egg density the previous fall did not account for
more than 50% of the observed variation in recruitment density. Thus, we expected that climatic patterns, as determinants
of discharge and water temperature, would play a role in the control of young trout abundance. We tested this by analyzing
the effects of flow variation and predictability on young trout survival during the spawning to emergence and the summer drought
periods. Both hatching and emergence times and length of hatching and emergence periods were similar between years within
each river but varied considerably among populations, due to differences in water temperature. Interannual variation in flow
attributes during spawning to emergence and summer drought affected juvenile survival in all populations, once the effect
of endogenous factors was removed. Survival rate was significantly related to the timing, magnitude and duration of extreme
water conditions, and to the rate of change in discharge during hatching and emergence times in most rivers. The magnitude
and duration of low flows during summer drought appeared to be a critical factor for survival of young trout. Our findings
suggest that density-independent factors, i.e., hydrological variability, play a central role in the population dynamics of
brown trout in populations from low-latitude range margins. Reported effects of hydrologic attributes on trout survival are
likely to be increasingly important if, as predicted, climate change leads to greater extremes and variability of flow regimes. |
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Keywords: | Hydrological variability
Salmo trutta
Marginal populations Population abundance Population regulation |
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