Top Banner
Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging Behavior Benjamin T. Freiberg Erin M. Howard Carson J. Smith
21

Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

Nov 16, 2021

Download

Documents

dariahiddleston
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging Behavior

Benjamin T. Freiberg Erin M. Howard Carson J. Smith

Page 2: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

Resident Coastal Cutthroat Trout (Oncorhynchus clarkii clarkii)

• Upstream feeders – Hold focal point

• Invertebrate drift – Distribution assumption

• Habitat (channel) complexity – Differences in velocity – LWD/logjams

Page 3: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

Study Questions

• Drift vs velocity – Relationship?

• Foraging distance vs amount and size of drift – More food-> Decreased foraging distance?

– Larger food -> Increased foraging distance?

• Foraging vs velocity – Where do fish sit and eat?

Page 4: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...
Page 5: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

VidSync

Page 6: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

Catch My Drift?

Page 7: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

Velocity

Page 8: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

Trials

1. Existing conditions - No changes; videogrammetry & drift collection

2. Supplemented drift - 550%; videogrammetry & drift collection

3. Increased channel complexity - Added boulder; videogrammetry

Page 9: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

Trials 1 & 2 Trial 3

Pool Setup

Page 10: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

Drift by Count 98%

2% 0%

18%

46%

25%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

Ephemeroptera Plecoptera Diptera

Per

cent of

Dir

ft

Taxa

Supplemented Drift Naturally Occurring Drift

Page 11: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

Drift Length Distribution

Page 12: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

Supplemental Drift: 6.40 mm

Naturally Occurring Drift: 4.20 mm

Page 13: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

Relationship between drift and velocity?

ANOVA of different velocities (p = 0.031) Rejects previous assumptions!

Page 14: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

Does foraging distance change with drift amount or size?

Page 15: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

Were Foraging Distances Dependent on Length?

Page 16: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

Velocity contours before and after boulder addition

0 cm

30 cm

60 cm

Trials 1&2

Trial 3

Page 17: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

Where are fish sitting and eating?

• Appeared to sit in lower velocities

– Often behind or in front of rocks

• Ate seemingly everywhere

– Surface, bed, fast, slow

• More analysis needed

Page 18: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

Key Findings

• Drift was significantly different across velocities

• Foraging distance decreased when drift amount and size were increased

• Fish sat in lower velocities and often ate in faster flows

Page 19: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

Future Analysis/Study

• Matching fish locations with velocities

• Larger sample of foraging distances

• Bottom eats

• More robust datasets

Page 20: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

Questions?

Page 21: Fish Bioenergetics: An Examination of Salmonid Foraging ...

Acknowledgements

Desirée Tullos, Dana Warren, Cara Walter, Julia Jones, Alix Gitelman, Tom Dietterich, Rebecca Hutchinson, Matt Kaylor, Kate Jones, Susan Elliot, Ashley Sanders, Levi Stovall, Nathan Sadowsky, Brian Draeger, Anna Young, Emelie Traub, National Science Foundation, Oregon State University, HJ Andrews Experimental Forest