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Spatial and Temporal Relations between Fluvial and Allacustrine Yellowstone Cutthroat Trout, Oncorhynchus clarki bouvieri, Spawning in the Yellowstone River, Outlet Stream of Yellowstone Lake
Authors:Lynn R. Kaeding  Glenn D. Boltz
Affiliation:(1) Yellowstone Fishery Assistance Office, Yellowstone National Park, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, WY, 82190, U.S.A.;(2) Present address: Branch of Native Fishes Management, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 4052 Bridger Canyon Road, Bozeman, MT, 59715, U.S.A.
Abstract:Yellowstone cutthroat trout (YCT), Oncorhynchus clarki bouvieri, that spawn in the outlet of Yellowstone Lake show two potamodromous migration patterns, fluvial and allacustrine. The main purpose of this study was to determine whether those fluvial and allacustrine YCT represent reproductively isolated stocks. Redd surveys indicated spawning occurred during about 5 consecutive weeks between late May and mid-July 1993–1995. Lake fish (N=6), defined as radiotagged YCT that entered Yellowstone Lake after the spawning period (i.e. allacustrine pattern), were found in the river between the lake outlet (river kilometer [Rkm] 0) and Rkm 20.0 during spawning. Probable lake fish (N=28; tagged YCT that were last detected near the lake outlet) were found between Rkm 0 and Rkm 22.5 during spawning. River fish (N=4; tagged YCT that remained in the river when annual tracking concluded in fall, i.e. fluvial pattern) were found between Rkm 1.1 and Rkm 18.0 during spawning. Fidelity to spawning areas used between consecutive years was suggested by one of five lake fish and the single river fish for which data were available. Spatial overlap in spawning and a lack of temporal separation between the life-history types during spawning suggested that fluvial and allacustrine YCT were not reproductively isolated. Radiotagging, as well as visual observations made annually from boats during April and May, indicated fluvial YCT overwintered downstream from Rkm 14 and were few, probably on the order of 10% of all YCT that spawned in the Yellowstone River.
Keywords:migration  sympatry  reproductive isolation  spawning-area fidelity  life history  radio telemetry  Salmonidae
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