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Seasonal changes in distribution of coastal cutthroat trout in an isolated watershed

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Title Seasonal changes in distribution of coastal cutthroat trout in an isolated watershed
Names Hendricks, Steve (creator)
Gresswell, Robert E. (advisor)
Date Issued 2002-06-06 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 2003
Abstract In an effort to identify seasonal distribution patterns and habitat requirements of coastal
cutthroat trout Oncorhynchus clarki clarki, movement of tagged and marked individuals
(35 radio-tagged, 753 PIT-tagged, and 5,322 fin-clipped) was monitored over a 14-month
period in an isolated watershed in southwestern Oregon. Emigration out of the basin was
estimated with a rotating fish trap. Results showed that 70% of recaptured PIT-tagged
cutthroat trout and 86% of radio-tagged fish moved among channel units. A smaller
proportion of tagged fish moved at the reach- and segment-scale. Greatest movement
occurred in April, at the peak of spawning, and the least occurred in October, when
discharge was at its lowest. Radio- and PIT-tagged cutthroat trout occupied pool habitat
62-97% of the time, depending on the season. Only 63 (< 1% of tagged and marked fish)
coastal cutthroat trout emigrated out of the study area between February and June. Results
suggested that unit-scale movement was common throughout the year, and reach- and
segment-scale movement was more important during the winter and spring. In addition,
habitats (e.g., pool, riffle, and cascade) occupied by coastal cutthroat trout change in
concert with discharge, water temperature, and life-history requirements (e.g., spawning,
refuge, and feeding).
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Coastal cutthroat trout -- Seasonal distribution -- Oregon -- Camp Creek (Douglas County)
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/20068

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