Lakeward and downstream movements of age-0 arctic grayling ( Thymallus arcticus ) originating between a lake and a waterfall

Arctic grayling in Deer Lake, Montana spawn only in the 350-m segment of outlet stream between the lake and a waterfall. The purpose of this study was to examine consequences of and possible adaptations by this population to spawning above the falls, by determining the extent of loss over the falls...

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Main Authors: Deleray, Mark A., Kaya, Calvin M.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: BYU ScholarsArchive 1992
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/gbn/vol52/iss4/8
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/context/gbn/article/2830/viewcontent/27060.pdf
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spelling ftbrighamyoung:oai:scholarsarchive.byu.edu:gbn-2830 2023-07-23T04:16:48+02:00 Lakeward and downstream movements of age-0 arctic grayling ( Thymallus arcticus ) originating between a lake and a waterfall Deleray, Mark A. Kaya, Calvin M. 1992-12-30T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/gbn/vol52/iss4/8 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/context/gbn/article/2830/viewcontent/27060.pdf unknown BYU ScholarsArchive https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/gbn/vol52/iss4/8 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/context/gbn/article/2830/viewcontent/27060.pdf Great Basin Naturalist text 1992 ftbrighamyoung 2023-07-03T21:49:57Z Arctic grayling in Deer Lake, Montana spawn only in the 350-m segment of outlet stream between the lake and a waterfall. The purpose of this study was to examine consequences of and possible adaptations by this population to spawning above the falls, by determining the extent of loss over the falls of age-0 young, the daily and seasonal patterns of such losses, and the seasonal pattern of movement upstream into the lake by the remaining young. We measured fish movements during 1989 and 1990 with traps placed at the outlet and at the falls, from fry swimup in July until October or November. Young went over the falls predominantly as newly swimming fry at night. In 1989 about 5000–9000 were lost downstream, representing an estimated 4–7% or less of young produced. Most young thus appear adapted to maintaining their position above the falls. A few started entering the lake in August and September, but only 95 in 1989 and 23 in 1990 had done so by the time observations were ended by the onset of wintery conditions. Most movement into the lake appeared to occur sometime during the six to seven months of annual ice cover. This extended period of stream residence contrasts with early lakeward movements reported for other inlet-spawning, lacustrine grayling populations and may be an adaptation for avoiding predation by large conspecifics in Deer Lake. Text Arctic grayling Arctic Thymallus arcticus Brigham Young University (BYU): ScholarsArchive Arctic Deer Lake ENVELOPE(-129.004,-129.004,53.126,53.126)
institution Open Polar
collection Brigham Young University (BYU): ScholarsArchive
op_collection_id ftbrighamyoung
language unknown
description Arctic grayling in Deer Lake, Montana spawn only in the 350-m segment of outlet stream between the lake and a waterfall. The purpose of this study was to examine consequences of and possible adaptations by this population to spawning above the falls, by determining the extent of loss over the falls of age-0 young, the daily and seasonal patterns of such losses, and the seasonal pattern of movement upstream into the lake by the remaining young. We measured fish movements during 1989 and 1990 with traps placed at the outlet and at the falls, from fry swimup in July until October or November. Young went over the falls predominantly as newly swimming fry at night. In 1989 about 5000–9000 were lost downstream, representing an estimated 4–7% or less of young produced. Most young thus appear adapted to maintaining their position above the falls. A few started entering the lake in August and September, but only 95 in 1989 and 23 in 1990 had done so by the time observations were ended by the onset of wintery conditions. Most movement into the lake appeared to occur sometime during the six to seven months of annual ice cover. This extended period of stream residence contrasts with early lakeward movements reported for other inlet-spawning, lacustrine grayling populations and may be an adaptation for avoiding predation by large conspecifics in Deer Lake.
format Text
author Deleray, Mark A.
Kaya, Calvin M.
spellingShingle Deleray, Mark A.
Kaya, Calvin M.
Lakeward and downstream movements of age-0 arctic grayling ( Thymallus arcticus ) originating between a lake and a waterfall
author_facet Deleray, Mark A.
Kaya, Calvin M.
author_sort Deleray, Mark A.
title Lakeward and downstream movements of age-0 arctic grayling ( Thymallus arcticus ) originating between a lake and a waterfall
title_short Lakeward and downstream movements of age-0 arctic grayling ( Thymallus arcticus ) originating between a lake and a waterfall
title_full Lakeward and downstream movements of age-0 arctic grayling ( Thymallus arcticus ) originating between a lake and a waterfall
title_fullStr Lakeward and downstream movements of age-0 arctic grayling ( Thymallus arcticus ) originating between a lake and a waterfall
title_full_unstemmed Lakeward and downstream movements of age-0 arctic grayling ( Thymallus arcticus ) originating between a lake and a waterfall
title_sort lakeward and downstream movements of age-0 arctic grayling ( thymallus arcticus ) originating between a lake and a waterfall
publisher BYU ScholarsArchive
publishDate 1992
url https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/gbn/vol52/iss4/8
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/context/gbn/article/2830/viewcontent/27060.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(-129.004,-129.004,53.126,53.126)
geographic Arctic
Deer Lake
geographic_facet Arctic
Deer Lake
genre Arctic grayling
Arctic
Thymallus arcticus
genre_facet Arctic grayling
Arctic
Thymallus arcticus
op_source Great Basin Naturalist
op_relation https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/gbn/vol52/iss4/8
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/context/gbn/article/2830/viewcontent/27060.pdf
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