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The Influence of Riparian Habitat and Microhabitat Selection on Fish Assemblaqe Structure in the Upper John Day Basin, Oreqon

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Title The Influence of Riparian Habitat and Microhabitat Selection
on Fish Assemblaqe Structure in the Upper John Day Basin, Oreqon
Names Leitzinger, Eric J. (creator)
Li, Hiram W. (advisor)
Date Issued 1992-06-24 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1993
Abstract Fish assemblage structure was determined along a longitudinal
gradient for three drainages in the upper John Day basin: Middle
Fork, South Fork, and upper Mainstem proper. One or two tributaries
in each drainage were included. Where possible, sites were paired:
those with good versus those with poor riparian habitat. Detrended
correspondence analysis was used to determine how the assemblages
were structured and to determine which environmental variables
influenced that structure. Two assemblages resulted: a warmwater
assemblage dominated by speckled dace (Rhinichthys osculus), redside
shiners (Richardsonius balteatus), northern squawfish (Ptychocheilus
oreqonensis), and suckers (Catostomus spp.); and a coldwater
assemblage dominated by juvenile steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and
chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha), but also containing
mountain whitefish (Prosopium williamsoni), piute sculpins (Cottus
beldingi), and other salmonids. This coldwater assemblage had two
distinct components: the chinook component and the steelhead
component. The chinook component was concentrated in the mid-elevation
reaches of the Mainstem and the Middle Fork, between the
steelhead component and the warmwater assemblage. The primary
physical gradient on which all assemblages aligned was an
elevation/stream size gradient. A secondary gradient consisted of
various riparian habitat and bank condition variables. Generally,
riparian habitat improved moving toward the headwaters.
Microhabitat use was compared for salmonids within a habitat
type (i.e. pools, riffles, and runs) for mainstem and tributary
streams. It was also compared for the same age classes and species
between stream types (mainstem versus tributary). Finally,
microhabitat selection (versus availability) was examined for
significant differences between microhabitat available and that
selected. Different age classes of steelhead and juvenile chinook
salmon used different microhabitats in the same habitat type. These
did not change significantly between habitats or stream type. All
groups selected microhabitats that varied significantly from that
available. The most important variables in all cases were focal
point depth and focal point velocity, total depth and mean velocity.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic John Day River Watershed (Or.)
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/11846

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