National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Northwest Fisheries Science Center, Watershed Program, Seattle, Washington, United States of America.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Marine Fisheries Service, West Coast Region, Klamath Branch, Arcata, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2022 May 24;17(5):e0268088. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0268088. eCollection 2022.
Across Eurasia and North America, beaver (Castor spp), their dams and their human-built analogues are becoming increasingly common restoration tools to facilitate recovery of streams and wetlands, providing a natural and cost-effective means of restoring dynamic fluvial ecosystems. Although the use of beaver ponds by numerous fish and wildlife species is well documented, debate continues as to the benefits of beaver dams, primarily because dams are perceived as barriers to fish movement, particularly migratory species such as salmonids. In this study, through a series of field experiments, we tested the ability of juvenile salmonids to cross constructed beaver dams (aka beaver dam analogues). Two species, coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) and steelhead trout (O. mykiss), were tracked using passive integrated transponder tags (PIT tags) as they crossed constructed beaver dam analogues. We found that when we tagged and moved these fishes from immediately upstream of the dams to immediately downstream of them, most were detected upstream within 36 hours of displacement. By the end of a 21-day field experiment, 91% of the displaced juvenile coho and 54% of the juvenile steelhead trout were detected on antennas upstream of the dams. In contrast, during the final week of the 21-day experiment, just 1 of 158 coho salmon and 6 of 40 (15%) of the steelhead trout were still detected on antennas in the release pool below the dams. A similar but shorter 4-day pilot experiment with only steelhead trout produced similar results. In contrast, in a non-displacement experiment, juveniles of both species that were captured, tagged and released in a pool 50 m below the dams showed little inclination to move upstream. Further, by measuring hydraulic conditions at the major flowpaths over and around the dams, we provide insight into low-flow conditions under which juvenile salmonids are able to cross these constructed beaver dams, and that multiple types of flowpaths may be beneficial towards assisting fish movement past instream restoration structures. Finally, we compared estimates of the number of juvenile salmonids using the pond habitat upstream of the dam relative to the number that the dam may have prevented from moving upstream. Upstream of the dams we found an abundance of juvenile salmonids and a several orders of magnitude difference in favor of the number of juveniles using the pond habitat upstream of the dam. In sum, our study suggests beaver dams, BDAs, and other channel spanning habitat features should be preserved and restored rather than removed as perceived obstructions to fish passage.
跨越欧亚大陆和北美洲,海狸(Castor spp)、它们的水坝以及人类建造的类似物越来越多地成为促进溪流和湿地恢复的常用恢复工具,为恢复动态河流生态系统提供了一种自然且具有成本效益的手段。尽管有许多鱼类和野生动物物种利用海狸池塘的情况已有充分记录,但关于海狸水坝的好处仍存在争议,主要是因为水坝被认为是鱼类洄游的障碍,尤其是鲑鱼等洄游物种。在这项研究中,我们通过一系列现场实验测试了幼年鲑鱼穿越人工建造的海狸水坝(又名海狸坝模拟物)的能力。我们使用被动式集成转发器标签(PIT 标签)追踪了两种鱼类,即银鲑(Oncorhynchus kisutch)和虹鳟(O. mykiss),当它们穿过人工建造的海狸坝模拟物时。我们发现,当我们标记并将这些鱼类从水坝的上游移动到下游时,大多数在位移后 36 小时内被检测到在上游。在 21 天野外实验结束时,91%的被转移的幼年银鲑和 54%的幼年虹鳟在水坝上游的天线中被检测到。相比之下,在 21 天实验的最后一周,只有 158 条银鲑和 40 条(15%)虹鳟中的 6 条仍在水坝下方的释放池中被天线检测到。一项仅针对虹鳟的类似但较短的 4 天试点实验也产生了类似的结果。相比之下,在没有位移的实验中,在水坝下游 50 米的一个池塘中捕获、标记和释放的两种鱼类幼虫几乎没有向上游移动的倾向。此外,通过测量水坝上方和周围主要水流路径的水力条件,我们深入了解了幼鲑鱼能够穿越这些人工建造的海狸水坝的低流量条件,并且多种类型的水流路径可能有助于帮助鱼类通过溪流恢复结构。最后,我们比较了利用水坝上游池塘生境的幼年鲑鱼数量的估计值与水坝可能阻止其向上游移动的数量。在水坝上游,我们发现了大量的幼年鲑鱼,而利用水坝上游池塘生境的幼鱼数量则存在着数量级上的差异。总之,我们的研究表明,海狸水坝、BDAs 和其他跨越河道的栖息地特征应该被保留和恢复,而不是被视为鱼类洄游的障碍物而被移除。