Differential use of salmon by vertebrate consumers: implications for conservation

Salmon and other anadromous fish are consumed by vertebrates with distinct life history strategies to capitalize on this ephemeral pulse of resource availability. Depending on the timing of salmon arrival, this resource may be in surplus to the needs of vertebrate consumers if, for instance, their p...

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Main Authors: Levi, Taal, Wheat, Rachel E., Allen, Jennifer M., Wilmers, Christopher C.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
unknown
Published: PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/79407z88d
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spelling ftoregonstate:ir.library.oregonstate.edu:79407z88d 2024-09-09T20:03:42+00:00 Differential use of salmon by vertebrate consumers: implications for conservation Levi, Taal Wheat, Rachel E. Allen, Jennifer M. Wilmers, Christopher C. https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/79407z88d English [eng] eng unknown PeerJ https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/79407z88d In Copyright Article ftoregonstate 2024-07-22T18:06:05Z Salmon and other anadromous fish are consumed by vertebrates with distinct life history strategies to capitalize on this ephemeral pulse of resource availability. Depending on the timing of salmon arrival, this resource may be in surplus to the needs of vertebrate consumers if, for instance, their populations are limited by food availability during other times of year. However, the life history of some consumers enables more efficient exploitation of these ephemeral resources. Bears can deposit fat and then hibernate to avoid winter food scarcity, and highly mobile consumers such as eagles, gulls, and other birds can migrate to access asynchronous pulses of salmon availability. We used camera traps on pink, chum, and sockeye salmon spawning grounds with various run times and stream morphologies, and on individual salmon carcasses, to discern potentially different use patterns among consumers. Wildlife use of salmon was highly heterogeneous. Ravens were the only avian consumer that fed heavily on pink salmon in small streams. Eagles and gulls did not feed on early pink salmon runs in streams, and only moderately at early sockeye runs, but were the dominant consumers at late chum salmon runs, particularly on expansive river flats. Brown bears used all salmon resources far more than other terrestrial vertebrates. Notably, black bears were not observed on salmon spawning grounds despite being the most frequently observed vertebrate on roads and trails. From a conservation and management perspective, all salmon species and stream morphologies are used extensively by bears, but salmon spawning late in the year are disproportionately important to eagles and other highly mobile species that are seasonally limited by winter food availability. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the author(s) and published by PeerJ. The published article can be found at: https://peerj.com/ Keywords: Anadromous fish, Marine-derived nutrients, Bald eagle, Bear, Resource pulse, Scavenger Article in Journal/Newspaper Pink salmon ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University) Sockeye ENVELOPE(-130.143,-130.143,54.160,54.160)
institution Open Polar
collection ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University)
op_collection_id ftoregonstate
language English
unknown
description Salmon and other anadromous fish are consumed by vertebrates with distinct life history strategies to capitalize on this ephemeral pulse of resource availability. Depending on the timing of salmon arrival, this resource may be in surplus to the needs of vertebrate consumers if, for instance, their populations are limited by food availability during other times of year. However, the life history of some consumers enables more efficient exploitation of these ephemeral resources. Bears can deposit fat and then hibernate to avoid winter food scarcity, and highly mobile consumers such as eagles, gulls, and other birds can migrate to access asynchronous pulses of salmon availability. We used camera traps on pink, chum, and sockeye salmon spawning grounds with various run times and stream morphologies, and on individual salmon carcasses, to discern potentially different use patterns among consumers. Wildlife use of salmon was highly heterogeneous. Ravens were the only avian consumer that fed heavily on pink salmon in small streams. Eagles and gulls did not feed on early pink salmon runs in streams, and only moderately at early sockeye runs, but were the dominant consumers at late chum salmon runs, particularly on expansive river flats. Brown bears used all salmon resources far more than other terrestrial vertebrates. Notably, black bears were not observed on salmon spawning grounds despite being the most frequently observed vertebrate on roads and trails. From a conservation and management perspective, all salmon species and stream morphologies are used extensively by bears, but salmon spawning late in the year are disproportionately important to eagles and other highly mobile species that are seasonally limited by winter food availability. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the author(s) and published by PeerJ. The published article can be found at: https://peerj.com/ Keywords: Anadromous fish, Marine-derived nutrients, Bald eagle, Bear, Resource pulse, Scavenger
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Levi, Taal
Wheat, Rachel E.
Allen, Jennifer M.
Wilmers, Christopher C.
spellingShingle Levi, Taal
Wheat, Rachel E.
Allen, Jennifer M.
Wilmers, Christopher C.
Differential use of salmon by vertebrate consumers: implications for conservation
author_facet Levi, Taal
Wheat, Rachel E.
Allen, Jennifer M.
Wilmers, Christopher C.
author_sort Levi, Taal
title Differential use of salmon by vertebrate consumers: implications for conservation
title_short Differential use of salmon by vertebrate consumers: implications for conservation
title_full Differential use of salmon by vertebrate consumers: implications for conservation
title_fullStr Differential use of salmon by vertebrate consumers: implications for conservation
title_full_unstemmed Differential use of salmon by vertebrate consumers: implications for conservation
title_sort differential use of salmon by vertebrate consumers: implications for conservation
publisher PeerJ
url https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/79407z88d
long_lat ENVELOPE(-130.143,-130.143,54.160,54.160)
geographic Sockeye
geographic_facet Sockeye
genre Pink salmon
genre_facet Pink salmon
op_relation https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/79407z88d
op_rights In Copyright
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