Water Stewardship Information Sources

ID 2898
Citation Warren, Kyla (2010) Factors influencing habitat use by juvenile interior Fraser coho. MSc - Supervisor: Mark Shrimpton. University of Northern British Columbia.
Organization University of Northern British Columbia
URL http://www.unbc.ca/sites/default/files/sections/quesnel-river-research-centre/kylawarrenthesis20091.pdf
Abstract/Description or Keywords The influence of physical and biological factors on juvenile interior Fraser coho (Oncorhynchus kisutch) habitat use was examined within the Horsefly River watershed using three approaches. Otolith microchemistry was used to assess potential movement of juveniles throughout the watershed. This analysis showed evidence of an average of 3.5 movements to different habitats within the Horsefly watershed during juvenile lifestage. It was not possible to track the location and timing of most of those migrations, but some appear to be the result of a movement into small tributaries in late summer and winter. A microhabitat model was used to determine physical characteristics of habitats where juvenile coho were captured. Low velocity, small stream width, a greater proportion of gravel as substrate, and high instream and overhead cover were strongly related to the presence and abundance of juvenile coho within the streams examined. A behavioural study in an artificial stream channel assessed the type of interactions that occur among juvenile coho. Juvenile interior Fraser coho exhibited little evidence of territoriality, contrasting with published reports of highly territorial juvenile coho behaviour in coastal systems. The lack of territoriality of the interior Fraser coho studied, their frequent migrations, and their strong association with cover, all suggest interior Fraser coho exhibit different habitat use patterns than coho in coastal streams. The difference in habitat use and requirements may influence the effectiveness of current management strategies, many of which are based solely on criteria from coastal coho research studies.
Information Type MSc Thesis
Regional Watershed Quesnel River
Sub-watershed if known Horsefly River
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