Translocation in a fragmented river provides demographic benefits for imperiled fishes

Author:

Pennock Casey A.1ORCID,Healy Brian D.2ORCID,Bogaard Matthew R.3,McKinstry Mark C.4,Gido Keith B.5,Cathcart C. Nathan6,Hines Brian4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology and Aquatic Ecology Laboratory The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

2. U.S. Geological Survey, Southwest Biological Science Center, Grand Canyon Monitoring and Research Center Flagstaff Arizona USA

3. Intergovernmental Salmon Management Unit Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife Olympia Washington USA

4. U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, Upper Colorado Regional Office Salt Lake City Utah USA

5. Division of Biology Kansas State University Manhattan Kansas USA

6. Alaska Department of Fish and Game Alaska Freshwater Fish Inventory Anchorage Alaska USA

Abstract

AbstractFragmentation isolates individuals and restricts access to valuable habitat with severe consequences for populations, such as reduced gene flow, disruption of recolonization dynamics, reduced resiliency to disturbance, and changes in aquatic community structure. Translocations to mitigate the effects of fragmentation and habitat loss are common, but few are rigorously evaluated, particularly for fishes. Over six years, we translocated 1215 individuals of four species of imperiled fish isolated below a barrier on the San Juan River, Utah, USA, that restricts access to upstream habitat. We used re‐encounter data (both passive integrated transponder tag and telemetry detections and physical recaptures) collected between 2016 and 2023, to inform a spatially explicit multistate mark–recapture model that estimated survival and transition probabilities of translocated and non‐translocated individuals, both below and above the barrier. Individuals of all four species moved large (>200 km) distances upstream following translocation, with the maximum upstream encounter distance varying by species. Results from the multistate mark–recapture model suggested translocated fish survived at a higher rate compared with non‐translocated fish below the barrier for three of the four species. Above the barrier, translocated individuals survived at similar rates as non‐translocated fish for bluehead sucker (Catostomus discobolus) and flannelmouth sucker (Catostomus latipinnis), while survival rates of translocated endangered Colorado pikeminnow (Ptychocheilus lucius; mean, 95% CI: 0.75, 0.55–0.88) and endangered razorback sucker (Xyrauchen texanus; 0.86, 0.75–0.92) were higher relative to non‐translocated individuals (Colorado pikeminnow: 0.52, 0.51–0.54; razorback sucker: 0.75, 0.74–0.75). Transition probabilities from above the barrier to below the barrier were generally low for three of the four species (all upper 95% CI ≤ 0.23), but they were substantially higher for razorback sucker. Our results suggest translocation to mitigate fragmentation and habitat loss can have demographic benefits for large‐river fish species by allowing movements necessary to complete their life history in heterogeneous riverscapes. Further, given the costs or delays in providing engineered fish passage structures or in achieving dam removal, we suggest translocations may provide an alternative conservation strategy in fragmented river systems.

Funder

Bureau of Reclamation

Salt River Project

Publisher

Wiley

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