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Density‐dependent mortality in adults,but not juveniles,of stream‐resident brown trout (Salmo trutta)
Authors:JAVIER LOBÓN‐CERVIÁ
Institution:National Museum of Natural Sciences (CSIC), Madrid, Spain
Abstract:1. This study investigates when and where density dependence operates on the mortality rates of stream‐resident brown trout Salmo trutta. To this aim, I explored populations in habitats of different quality containing high, low or intermediate densities over broad scales of space and time. The study is based on census data of 170 cohorts quantified from recruitment to the total disappearance at 12 sites in four contrasting tributaries of the Rio Esva drainage (north‐western Spain), over the years 1986–2007. 2. Log10‐transformed survivor density over time highlighted a consistent pattern for the 170 cohorts characterised by the occurrence of only two life stages. An early stage starts at recruitment, lasts about half the lifetime and shows no or negligible mortality. A threshold time at 425–620 days after emergence preceded a second stage of continuous and constant mortality until the final disappearance of the cohorts. Consequently, in all scenarios, mortality only occurred in the adult component and no effect of season, year, age‐class and/or reproductive stage was detected. 3. Substantial spatial and temporal variations typified both recruitment (range R = 0.01–1.62 ind m?2) and adults’ mortality rates (range Z = 0.03–0.38 day?1). Nested anova s revealed strong effects of site and year on both recruitment and mortality with sites interspersed along the stream gradients where recruitment and mortality were typically high relative to other sites located either nearby in the same stream or distant in another stream, where both recruitment and mortality rates were typically low or intermediate. 4. Adult mortality rates plotted against recruitment for the 170 cohorts pooled revealed a continuous, positive power relationship that explained 45.3% of variation in mortality rates over the whole range of recruitment values. Similarly, highly significant power relationships were elucidated for site‐specific mortality rates averaged across years and for annual‐specific mortality rates averaged across sites against the corresponding mean recruitment averaged across years and sites, respectively. These relationships support the hypothesis that the operation of density dependence is scale independent and context independent but operates in a continuous manner across all scenarios examined. 5. A chronic effect of density dependence on adult losses induces temporally persistent populations maintained by a low number of spawners. Apparently, the operation of density dependence adjusts the number of spawners to the availability of rearing and spawning habitat. This dynamic process may also help to explain the small effective population size (Ne) recently documented by genetic studies of stream‐living brown trout and other salmonids.
Keywords:brown trout  density dependence  mortality rates  recruitment  streams
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