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  3. Glen Canyon Dam Adaptive Management Program Administrative History
  4. A Quantitative Life History of Endangered Humpback Chub That Spawn in the Little Colorado River: Variation in Movement, Growth, and Survival
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A Quantitative Life History of Endangered Humpback Chub That Spawn in the Little Colorado River: Variation in Movement, Growth, and Survival

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Description

While the ecology and evolution of partial migratory systems (defined broadly to include skip spawning) have been well studied, we are only beginning to under- stand how partial migratory populations are responding to ongoing environmen- tal change. Environmental change can lead to differences in the fitness of residents and migrants, which could eventually lead to changes in the frequency of the strategies in the overall population. Here, we address questions concerning the life history of the endangered Gila cypha (humpback chub) in the regulated Colorado River and the unregulated tributary and primary spawning area, the Little Colorado River. We develop eight multistate models for the population based on three movement hypotheses, in which states are defined in terms of fish size classes and river locations. We fit these models to mark–recapture data col- lected in 2009–2012. We compare survival and growth estimates between the Col- orado River and Little Colorado River and calculate abundances for all size classes. The best model supports the hypotheses that larger adults spawn more frequently than smaller adults, that there are residents in the spawning grounds, and that juveniles move out of the Little Colorado River in large numbers during the monsoon season (July–September). Monthly survival rates for G. cypha in the Colorado River are higher than in the Little Colorado River in all size classes; however, growth is slower. While the hypothetical life histories of life-long resi- dents in the Little Colorado River and partial migrants spending most of its time in the Colorado River are very different, they lead to roughly similar fitness expectations when we used expected number of spawns as a proxy. However, more research is needed because our study period covers a period of years when conditions in the Colorado River for G. cypha are likely to have been better than has been typical over the last few decades.

Date Created
2014-01-16
Contributors
  • Yackulic, Charles B. (Author)
  • Yard, Michael D. (Author)
  • Korman, Josh (Author)
  • Van Haverbeke, David R. (Author)
Topical Subject
  • Dams
  • fitness trade-offs
  • Grand Canyon
  • hydrology
  • multistate
  • partial migration
  • size-dependent
  • spawning
  • tributary
Resource Type
Text
Extent
13 pages
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
No Known Copyright
Primary Member of
Glen Canyon Dam Adaptive Management Program Administrative History
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Series
Topic - Ecosystem and Biological Resources||Key Readings
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62581
Level of coding
minimal
Cataloging Standards
asu1
System Created
  • 2020-12-01 06:54:23
System Modified
  • 2022-06-07 06:12:48
  •     
  • 11 months 3 weeks ago
Additional Formats
  • OAI Dublin Core
  • MODS XML

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