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Historical Population Structure of Central Valley Steelhead and Its Alteration by Dams

Authors :
Steven T. Lindley
Robert S. Schick
Aditya Agrawal
Matthew Goslin
Thomas E. Pearson
Ethan Mora
James J. Anderson
Bernard May
Sheila Greene
Charles Hanson
Alice Low
Dennis McEwan
R. Bruce MacFarlane
Christina Swanson
John G. Williams
Source :
San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science, Vol 4, Iss 1 (2006)
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
eScholarship Publishing, University of California, 2006.

Abstract

Effective conservation and recovery planning for Central Valley steelhead requires an understanding of historical population structure. We describe the historical structure of the Central Valley steelhead evolutionarily significant unit using a multi-phase modeling approach. In the first phase, we identify stream reaches possibly suitable for steelhead spawning and rearing using a habitat model based on environmental envelopes (stream discharge, gradient, and temperature) that takes a digital elevation model and climate data as inputs. We identified 151 patches of potentially suitable habitat with more than 10 km of stream habitat, with a total of 25,500 km of suitable habitat. We then measured the distances among habitat patches, and clustered together patches within 35 km of each other into 81 distinct habitat patches. Groups of fish using these 81 patches are hypothesized to be (or to have been) independent populations for recovery planning purposes. Consideration of climate and elevation differences among the 81 habitat areas suggests that there are at least four major subdivisions within the Central Valley steelhead ESU that correspond to geographic regions defined by the Sacramento River basin, Suisun Bay area tributaries, San Joaquin tributaries draining the Sierra Nevada, and lower-elevation streams draining to the Buena Vista and Tulare basins, upstream of the San Joaquin River. Of these, it appears that the Sacramento River basin was the main source of steelhead production. Presently, impassable dams block access to 80% of historically available habitat, and block access to all historical spawning habitat for about 38% of the historical populations of steelhead.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15462366
Volume :
4
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.b7b133b54be4fa59a15a7e6efa24e65
Document Type :
article