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Partial migration in Oncorhynchus mykiss: A spatially and sexually explicit approach Justin Mills, USGS/OSU (MS, 2008) Jason Dunham, USGS-FRESC Chris Jordan, NOAA-Fisheries Gordie Reeves, USFS-PNW John McMillan, USGS/OSU (MS 2009) Chris Zimmerman, USGS J. McMillan photos
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Sex and migration Costs / benefits of migrationMalesFemales Decreased age-specific survivalXX Avoid poor freshwater conditionsXX Increased body sizeXX Fitness strongly size dependentoX J. McMillan photos
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Space: John Day River
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Study objectives 1) Broad-scale measures of female anadromy 2) Predict patterns of female anadromy 3) Assess potential importance of local variability
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Study design Collect juvenile O. mykiss Determine maternal origin Test for non-random distribution Sites with anadromy Broad-scale environmental variable(s) Predictive model Test for residual spatial variation Tests of model performance Collect water samples
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Collection and maternal origin P. Stratis photos 1 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2 2.2 2.4 0200400600 Distance from centrum (microns) Sr/Ca ratio Two fish + water sample Four otoliths
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Two rainbow trout offspring Anadromy was common, widespread Offspring of # Steelhead91 Rainbow trout 58 Anadromy at 52 of 72 sites One of each Two steelhead offspring
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How is maternal origin distributed? R R R R S R R R S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S R R R S S S S R R R R R R R S S S S S SR = Rainbow trout offspring = Rainbow trout offspring S = Steelhead offspring = Steelhead offspring Random distribution Numerical dominance or spatial segregation
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Maternal origin was clustered Combination at siteObservedExpected Different maternal origin11 (23%)22.4 (48%) Same maternal origin36 (77%)24.6 (52%) Both steelhead23 (49%)17.3 (37%) Both rainbow trout13 (28%)7.3 (15%) n = 47 sites; only those with 2 juveniles < 2 years old ² = 11.15, df = 1, P < 0.001
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Objective 2: Predictive model Sites with anadromy Broad-scale environmental variable(s) Predictive model Test for residual spatial variation Tests of model performance
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Stream size and anadromy Associated with many ecological and physical processes –Sediment transport –Water temperature –Biological organization Readily used in spatial statistics Simple to estimate for large area
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Anadromy varied with stream size
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Mantel test for spatial autocorrelation A B Euclideandistance Stream network distance ΔDistance ΔResidual Autocorrelated residuals
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No spatial autocorrelation Mantel tests non-significant Spatial gradients accounted for by model Subset of 1/5 of pairwise distances
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Bottom lines Sampling approach proved useful Female anadromy was predictable Stream size accounted for most of the broad-scale variability in female anadromy Local factors potentially source of remaining variability J. McMillan photos
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Improvements Model improvements –Redd counts –Combined probabilistic predictions Local factors –Bioenergetics –Species interactions –Community effects –Ecosystem processes Doesn’t address males Doesn’t address resident females
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The process: critical periods, sexual tension, and everything in-between The evidence: observation, model, experiment – correlation vs causation? The relevance: ESA listing, modeling, monitoring, recovery du les sauvages? Discussion
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