Data from: Reconstructing the migratory behavior and long-term survivorship of juvenile Chinook salmon under contrasting hydrologic regimes
The loss of genetic and life history diversity has been documented across many taxonomic groups, and is considered a leading cause of increased extinction risk. Juvenile salmon leave their natal rivers at different sizes, ages and times of the year, and it is thought that this life history variation...
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Zusammenfassung: | The loss of genetic and life history diversity has been documented across
many taxonomic groups, and is considered a leading cause of increased
extinction risk. Juvenile salmon leave their natal rivers at different
sizes, ages and times of the year, and it is thought that this life
history variation contributes to their population sustainability, and is
thus central to many recovery efforts. However, in order to preserve and
restore diversity in life history traits, it is necessary to first
understand how environmental factors affect their expression and success.
We used otolith 87Sr/86Sr in adult Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus
tshawytcha) returning to the Stanislaus River in the California Central
Valley (USA) to reconstruct the sizes at which they outmigrated as
juveniles in a wetter (2000) and drier (2003) year. We compared rotary
screw trap-derived estimates of outmigrant timing, abundance and size with
those reconstructed in the adults from the same cohort. This allowed us to
estimate the relative survival and contribution of migratory phenotypes
(fry, parr, smolts) to the adult spawning population under different flow
regimes. Juvenile abundance and outmigration behavior varied with
hydroclimatic regime, while downstream survival appeared to be driven by
size- and time-selective mortality. Although fry survival is generally
assumed to be negligible in this system, >20% of the adult spawners
from outmigration year 2000 had outmigrated as fry. In both years, all
three phenotypes contributed to the spawning population, however their
relative proportions differed, reflecting greater fry contributions in the
wetter year (23% vs. 10%) and greater smolt contributions in the drier
year (13% vs. 44%). These data demonstrate that the expression and success
of migratory phenotypes vary with hydrologic regime, emphasizing the
importance of maintaining diversity in a changing climate. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.c56rk |