Diel Summer Movement Patterns of Fish in Sickle Creek, Manistee County, Michigan

This study investigated the location, habitat preferences, and diel movements of burbot (lota lota) and salmonids in a small tributary stream in late spring, early summer. The research provides base-line information on fish distribution prior to the replacement of a culvert and reconnection of upstr...

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Main Author: Salas, Andria
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: ScholarWorks@GVSU 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/mcnair/vol9/iss1/13
https://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1055&context=mcnair
id ftgvstateuniv:oai:scholarworks.gvsu.edu:mcnair-1055
record_format openpolar
spelling ftgvstateuniv:oai:scholarworks.gvsu.edu:mcnair-1055 2023-05-15T15:47:14+02:00 Diel Summer Movement Patterns of Fish in Sickle Creek, Manistee County, Michigan Salas, Andria 2005-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/mcnair/vol9/iss1/13 https://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1055&context=mcnair unknown ScholarWorks@GVSU https://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/mcnair/vol9/iss1/13 https://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1055&context=mcnair McNair Scholars Journal Burbot Salmonids Diel Movements Habitat Animal Sciences text 2005 ftgvstateuniv 2022-12-09T08:05:22Z This study investigated the location, habitat preferences, and diel movements of burbot (lota lota) and salmonids in a small tributary stream in late spring, early summer. The research provides base-line information on fish distribution prior to the replacement of a culvert and reconnection of upstream reaches. The tributary was divided into six 100-meter reaches using blocker nets and data was collected using mark-recapture and electrofishing techniques. The community was dominated by coho (Oncorhynchus kisutch) and chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha), rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri), northern mottled sculpin (Cottus bairdii bairdii), brook lamprey (Ichthyomyzon fosser), and the burbot. Salmonids favored undercut banks during the day (p=0.014) and woody debris at night (p=0.017, ANOVA). Substrate was dominated by sand thus the bulk of aquatic macroinvertebrate production was likely occurring on large woody debris—the area preferred by the fish at dusk and at night. In addition, water depth was positively correlated to fish density (R2 = 0.73; p=0.031, step-wise MLR). Like the salmonids, burbot preferred undercut banks and abundance appeared to increase at night—a pattern observed in all major fish species with the exception of the chinook salmon, although trends were not significant for any species. The majority of captured fish were juvenile, and we hypothesize that at these early life-history stages, the fish are moving into the tributary system at dusk to avoid predation pressure in the main channel. The coho population decreased through time (p=0.034) while rainbow trout YOY increased (p=0.039). There was no recapture of fin-clipped rainbow trout (year one plus) indicating a high degree of turnover with the main channel, likely as a result of the culvert. Text Burbot Lota lota lota Grand Valley State University: Scholar Works @ GVSU Sickle ENVELOPE(-66.783,-66.783,-68.867,-68.867) Sickle Creek ENVELOPE(-137.276,-137.276,60.262,60.262)
institution Open Polar
collection Grand Valley State University: Scholar Works @ GVSU
op_collection_id ftgvstateuniv
language unknown
topic Burbot
Salmonids
Diel Movements
Habitat
Animal Sciences
spellingShingle Burbot
Salmonids
Diel Movements
Habitat
Animal Sciences
Salas, Andria
Diel Summer Movement Patterns of Fish in Sickle Creek, Manistee County, Michigan
topic_facet Burbot
Salmonids
Diel Movements
Habitat
Animal Sciences
description This study investigated the location, habitat preferences, and diel movements of burbot (lota lota) and salmonids in a small tributary stream in late spring, early summer. The research provides base-line information on fish distribution prior to the replacement of a culvert and reconnection of upstream reaches. The tributary was divided into six 100-meter reaches using blocker nets and data was collected using mark-recapture and electrofishing techniques. The community was dominated by coho (Oncorhynchus kisutch) and chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha), rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri), northern mottled sculpin (Cottus bairdii bairdii), brook lamprey (Ichthyomyzon fosser), and the burbot. Salmonids favored undercut banks during the day (p=0.014) and woody debris at night (p=0.017, ANOVA). Substrate was dominated by sand thus the bulk of aquatic macroinvertebrate production was likely occurring on large woody debris—the area preferred by the fish at dusk and at night. In addition, water depth was positively correlated to fish density (R2 = 0.73; p=0.031, step-wise MLR). Like the salmonids, burbot preferred undercut banks and abundance appeared to increase at night—a pattern observed in all major fish species with the exception of the chinook salmon, although trends were not significant for any species. The majority of captured fish were juvenile, and we hypothesize that at these early life-history stages, the fish are moving into the tributary system at dusk to avoid predation pressure in the main channel. The coho population decreased through time (p=0.034) while rainbow trout YOY increased (p=0.039). There was no recapture of fin-clipped rainbow trout (year one plus) indicating a high degree of turnover with the main channel, likely as a result of the culvert.
format Text
author Salas, Andria
author_facet Salas, Andria
author_sort Salas, Andria
title Diel Summer Movement Patterns of Fish in Sickle Creek, Manistee County, Michigan
title_short Diel Summer Movement Patterns of Fish in Sickle Creek, Manistee County, Michigan
title_full Diel Summer Movement Patterns of Fish in Sickle Creek, Manistee County, Michigan
title_fullStr Diel Summer Movement Patterns of Fish in Sickle Creek, Manistee County, Michigan
title_full_unstemmed Diel Summer Movement Patterns of Fish in Sickle Creek, Manistee County, Michigan
title_sort diel summer movement patterns of fish in sickle creek, manistee county, michigan
publisher ScholarWorks@GVSU
publishDate 2005
url https://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/mcnair/vol9/iss1/13
https://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1055&context=mcnair
long_lat ENVELOPE(-66.783,-66.783,-68.867,-68.867)
ENVELOPE(-137.276,-137.276,60.262,60.262)
geographic Sickle
Sickle Creek
geographic_facet Sickle
Sickle Creek
genre Burbot
Lota lota
lota
genre_facet Burbot
Lota lota
lota
op_source McNair Scholars Journal
op_relation https://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/mcnair/vol9/iss1/13
https://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1055&context=mcnair
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