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Effects Of High-flow Experiments From Glen Canyon Dam On Abundance Growth And Survival Rates Of Early Life Stages Of Rainbow Trout In The

From Josh Korman

Current price: $18.99
Effects Of High-flow Experiments From Glen Canyon Dam On Abundance Growth And Survival Rates Of Early Life Stages Of Rainbow Trout In The
Effects Of High-flow Experiments From Glen Canyon Dam On Abundance Growth And Survival Rates Of Early Life Stages Of Rainbow Trout In The

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Effects Of High-flow Experiments From Glen Canyon Dam On Abundance Growth And Survival Rates Of Early Life Stages Of Rainbow Trout In The

From Josh Korman

Current price: $18.99
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Size: 0.09 x 9.69 x 0.21

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High-flow experiments (HFEs) from Glen Canyon Dam are primarily intended to conserve fine sediment and improve habitat conditions for native fish in the Colorado River as it flows through Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona. These experimental flows also have the potential to affect the rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) population in the Lees Ferry tailwater reach immediately below the dam, which supports a highly valued recreational fishery and likely influences the abundance of rainbow trout in Grand Canyon. Understanding how flow regimes affect the survival and growth of juvenile rainbow trout is critical to interpreting trends in adult abundance. This study reports on the effects of HFEs in 2004 and 2008 on early life stages of rainbow trout in the Lees Ferry reach on the basis of monthly sampling of redds (egg nests) and the abundance of the age-0 trout (fertilization to about 1 to 2 months from emergence) and their growth during a 7-year period between 2003 and 2009. Multiple lines of evidence indicate that the March 2008 HFE resulted in a large increase in early survival rates of age-0 trout because of an improvement in habitat conditions. A stock-recruitment analysis demonstrated that age-0 abundance in July 2008 was more than fourfold higher than expected, given the number of viable eggs that produced these fish. A hatch-date analysis showed that early survival rates were much higher for cohorts that hatched about 1 month after the 2008 HFE (about April 15, 2008) relative to those fish that hatched before this date. These cohorts, fertilized after the 2008 HFE, would have emerged into a benthic invertebrate community that had recovered, and was possibly enhanced by, the HFE. Interannual differences in growth of age-0 trout, determined on the basis of otolith microstructure, support this hypothesis. Growth rates in the summer and fall of 2008 (0.44 mm/day) were virtually the same as in 2006 (0.46 mm/day), the highest recorded during 6 years, even though a | Effects Of High-flow Experiments From Glen Canyon Dam On Abundance Growth And Survival Rates Of Early Life Stages Of Rainbow Trout In The

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