Chavez Martinique J, Budy Phaedra, Pennock Casey A, Archdeacon Thomas P, MacKinnon Peter D
Department of Watershed Sciences, Utah State University, Logan, UT, USA.
American Southwest Ichthyological Researchers, Albuquerque, NM, USA.
Mov Ecol. 2024 Jul 31;12(1):52. doi: 10.1186/s40462-024-00490-w.
Unfettered movement among habitats is crucial for fish to access patchily distributed resources and complete their life cycle, but many riverscapes in the American Southwest are fragmented by dams and dewatering. The endangered Rio Grande silvery minnow (Hybognathus amarus, RGSM) persists in a fragmented remnant of its former range (ca. 5%), and its movement ecology is understudied.
We tracked movements of hatchery-reared RGSM, tagged with passive integrated transponder tags, using stationary and mobile antennas from 2019 to 2022. We quantified probability of movement and total distance moved by RGSM released above and below a dam. We then assessed how well two prevailing riverine movement theories (i.e., restricted movement paradigm [RMP] and colonization cycle hypothesis [CCH]) explained RGSM movement patterns.
We detected 36.8% of released RGSM (n = 37,215) making at least one movement. Movements were leptokurtic and substantially greater than expected based on the RMP for both stationary (1.7-5.9 m) and mobile (30.3-77.8 m) individuals. On average, RGSM were detected at large for 75 days and moved a total of 12.2 rkm within a year. The maximum total distance moved by RGSM was 103 rkm. Similarly, we observed a multimodal distribution of detected range sizes with a mean detected range of 2.4 rkm and a maximum detected range of 78.2 rkm. We found little support for an upstream movement bias, as expected under the CCH, and most movements (74%) were directed downstream.
Our data suggest RGSM are highly mobile, with the ability to make long-distance movements. Neither movement theory adequately described movement patterns of RGSM; instead, our findings support a nomadic movement pattern and an apparent drift paradox matching recent studies of other pelagic-broadcast spawning minnows where populations persist upstream despite experiencing downstream drift as larvae. Resolution of the drift paradox may be achieved through further, targeted studies into different aspects of the species' life history. Quantification of RGSM movement provides crucial insights into the species' movement ecology and may help define the appropriate scale of recovery efforts.
栖息地间不受限制的移动对于鱼类获取分布不均的资源并完成其生命周期至关重要,但美国西南部的许多河景因水坝和脱水而破碎化。濒危的格兰德河银汉鱼(Hybognathus amarus,RGSM)仅存于其原分布范围的一个破碎化残余区域(约5%),其移动生态学尚未得到充分研究。
我们在2019年至2022年期间,使用固定天线和移动天线,追踪了用被动集成应答器标签标记的孵化场养殖的RGSM的移动情况。我们量化了RGSM在水坝上下游放流后的移动概率和总移动距离。然后,我们评估了两种主流的河流移动理论(即受限移动范式[RMP]和定殖循环假说[CCH])对RGSM移动模式的解释程度。
我们检测到36.8%的放流RGSM(n = 37215)至少进行了一次移动。移动呈尖峰态,对于固定个体(1.7 - 5.9米)和移动个体(30.3 - 77.8米)而言,移动距离都大大超过了基于RMP的预期。平均而言,RGSM被大范围检测到的时间为75天,一年内总共移动了12.2河公里。RGSM移动的最大总距离为103河公里。同样,我们观察到检测到的范围大小呈多峰分布,平均检测范围为2.4河公里,最大检测范围为78.2河公里。正如CCH所预期的那样,我们几乎没有发现上游移动偏向的证据,并且大多数移动(74%)是向下游的。
我们的数据表明RGSM具有高度的移动性,能够进行长距离移动。两种移动理论都不能充分描述RGSM的移动模式;相反,我们的研究结果支持一种游牧移动模式和明显的漂流悖论,这与最近对其他浮游产卵银汉鱼的研究结果相符,即尽管幼鱼经历向下游的漂流,但种群仍在上游持续存在。通过对该物种生活史不同方面进行进一步的针对性研究,可能解决漂流悖论。RGSM移动的量化为该物种的移动生态学提供了关键见解,并可能有助于确定恢复工作的适当规模。