Title: Eastern Brook trout: Joint venture
1Eastern Brook trout Joint venture
- Editors
- M. Hudy, USDA Forest Service
- T.M. Thieling, USDA Forest Service, James Madison
University - N. Gnat Gillespie, Trout Unlimited
- Eric P. Smith , Virginia Tech
2and a cast of thousands
- New York
- D. Bishop
- J. Robins
- B. Hammers
- F. Angold
- W. Pearsall
- C. Guthrie
- D. Zielinski
- F. Linhart
- D. Cornwell
- W. Elliot
- L. Suprenant
- B. Angyal
- R. Pierce
- M. Flaherty
- F. Flack
- R. Preall
- J. Daley
- Virginia
- Larry Mohn
- Paul Bugas
- Steve Reeser
- Maine
- Merry Gallagher
- Paul Johnson
- Gregory Burr
- Rick Jordan
- Ron Brokaw
- Forrest Bonney
- David Howard
- James Pellern
- Francis Brautigan
- Timothy Obrey
- Nels Kramer
- David Basley
- North Carolina
- Doug Bestler
3The Big Picture Through the eyes of a brook
trout!
4- Study Area
- 25 of native range
- 70 of native range in the U.S.
5 Assessment goals
- Assess the loss of reproducing brook trout
habitat as it relates to historic
(pre-settlement) levels. - Assess watershed perturbations by expert opinion
- Assess watershed level metrics using GIS
- Make an interactive database on the web (ArcIMS)
6What the assessment is not
- Classification of wild trout
- Classification of recreational fishing quality or
potential - A value judgment on past or current management
practices - A viability assessment
7Methods
8What scale?
9Appropriate Scale
- 5th level too big
- Stream reach too small (too many)
- 6th level just right
- How big is a 6th level watershed?
- 41-163 sq. km
- 1 quadrangle map
106th Level watersheds classifications (n gt 10,000)
- Preliminary classification with GIS layers
- Validation of Classifications with experts
11Brook trout population status classifications by
6th level watershed
- Present Reduced
- (50 to 90 of historic habitat occupied)
- Present Greatly reduced ( lt 50 of historic
habitat occupied)
- Unknown (no data)
- AbsentUnknown history (no brook trout today, not
known if extirpated or never occurred) - Never occurred
- Extirpated
- Present Qualitative
- (no quantitative data in watershed or gt 10
years old) - Present Intact
- (gt 90 of historic habitat)
12Reducing subjectivity
- Consistency rules
- Data standards (quality age)
- Broad classification categories
- No brainers
- high repeatability
- Standard validation procedures with experts for
each subwatershed (N gt 11,000)
13Consistency Rules for reduction
- Documented loss of reproducing populations by
current or historical data - Only exotic coldwater species reproducing (within
MacCrimmon and Campbell range) - Exotics greater than 75 of coldwater fish
biomass or numbers - Brook trout carrying capacity reduced by greater
than 90 from historic or reference data within
the watershed - Reproducing brook trout stream inundated by dam
and converted to warm water - Acid mine drainage, acid rain, etc eliminated
habitat - Severe channelization (stream paved)
- Watershed changed from coldwater to warmwater by
riparian changes (documented water temp)
14 Results
15Study Area 6th level watersheds
- Unknown no data 14
- Absent unknown history 5
- Extirpated 21
- PresentQualitative
- 19
- Present Intact 5
- Present Reduced 9
- Present Greatly reduced 27
16Final Classifications
- Extirpated
- Predicted Extirpated from Unknown and Present
qualitative - Reduced gt 50
- Predicted Reduced gt 50 from Unknown and Present
qualitative - Intact gt 50
- Predicted Intact gt 50 from Unknown and Present
qualitative
17Study Area 6th level watersheds
- Extirpated 21
- Predicated extirpated 8
- Reduced gt50
- 28
- Predicated Reduced gt50 7
- Intact gt50 14
- Predicated Intact gt50 17
- Absent Unknown History 5
18Limiting factors by watershed(expert opinion)
19Limiting factors by watershed(mark all that
apply)
- 1 high impact loss of life cycle component
- 2 medium impact life cycle component reduced
but not lost - 3 low impact potential future impact on life
cycle component reduction or loss
20 Streams
21Top Ten Threats Streams Cumulative Categories 1
2n 4,484
- Agriculture 36
- High Water Temperature 35
- Sediment-Roads 27
- All Exotics 26
- Urbanization 25
- Riparian Habitat 22.
- Brown trout 19
- Stream Fragmentation - Roads Culverts 17
- Dams 15
- Forestry 15
22- Number 1 perturbation
- Agriculture
23- Number 2 perturbation
- water temperature
24- Number 3 perturbation
- urbanization
25- Number 4 perturbation
- Exotics
26- Number 12 perturbation
- Acid mine drainage
27Lakes
28Top Ten Threats Lakes Cumulative Categories 1
2n 1,294
- All Exotics 25
- Smallmouth bass 14
- Other cool/warm exotics 13
- Largemouth bass 10
- Dissolved oxygen 4
- Eutrophication 4
- Forestry 3
- Water temp 3
- Brown trout 3
- Northern pike 3
29 GIS Analysis
3010,838 6th level subwatersheds
31Candidate Metrics
Subwatershed and Subwatershed Corridor Scale
- Road Density
- Dams/area
- Road/Stream Crossings
- Population Density
- NO3 and SO4 Deposition
- Exotics
- Elevation
- Latitude/Longitude
- Land Use (21 land use classes)
Over 60 Metrics
32National Land Cover Data (30m)
Human Uses
Natural Cover
- Low Intensity Residential
- High Intensity Residential
- Commercial/Industrial/ Transportation
- Quarries/Strip Mines/Gravel Pits
- Transitional
- Orchards/Vineyards
- Pasture/Hay
- Row Crops
- Small Grains
- Fallow
- Urban/Recreational Grasses
- Woody Wetlands
- Emergent Herbaceous Wetlands
- Open Water
- Perennial Ice/Snow
- Bare Rock/Sand/Clay
- Deciduous Forest
- Evergreen Forest
- Mixed Forest
- Shrubland
- Grasslands/Herbaceous
Derived Cover
- Total Forested
- Agriculture
- Residential
- Human Use
33Metric testing screening
- Completeness
- Correct for watershed size
- Range
- Redundancy
- Responsiveness to classification categories
34Model Development
- We tried
- Single metric logistic regression
- Multi metric logistic regression
- CART Classification Trees
- Discriminate
- Nearest neighbor
35We picked CART classification trees
Because
- Higher of correct predictions
- Easier interpretation than logistic (especially
trinomial) multi metric - Helps in development of thresholds for land
managers
36What CART classification trees do
- Look at all possible combination of metrics and
metric values to most efficiently divide the
dataset - Sets up a decision tree using different metric
values as splitting criteria (20 80 couplets) - Predicts the probability of correct
classifications at terminal nodes
37Final Core Metrics for CART Analysis
- Forested land
- Agricultural land
- Combined N03 SO4 deposition (kg/ha)
- Road density (km/km2)
- Mixed forested land in corridor
- Latitude (decimal degrees)
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40Model Development CART
- M1 Presence Extirpated
- 5 core metrics
- M2 Presence Extirpated
- 5 core metrics latitude
- M3 Extirpated Reduced gt 50 Intact gt50
- 5 core metrics
- M4 Extirpated Reduced gt 50 Intact gt50
- 5 core metrics latitude
41M1 Presence Extirpated79 correct overall80
Extirpated78 Present
- Forest lt 68
- Deposition lt 23 kg/ha
- Road Density lt 1.19 km/km2
- Riparian Mixed Forest lt12
- Deposition lt 23 kg/ha
- Deposition lt 28 kg/ha
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44M3 Extirpated Reduced gt 50 Intact gt 5071
correct overall76 Extirpated64 Reduced79
Intact
- Forest lt68
- Deposition lt 28 kg/ha
- Deposition lt 19 kg/ha
- Agriculture lt 27
- Road Density lt 1.67 km/km2
- Deposition lt 18 kg/ha
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47Study Area 6th level watersheds
- Extirpated 21
- Predicated extirpated 8
- Reduced gt50
- 28
- Predicated Reduced gt50 7
- Intact gt50 14
- Predicated Intact gt50 17
- Absent Unknown History 5
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55 Model Analysis
56Areas of misclassification
1. Extirpated subwatersheds misclassified as
presentExotic species?
57Areas of misclassification
2. Reduced and Intact subwatersheds predicted as
Extirpated Low Total Forest and High
Deposition. Watershed size??
58 Key findings
59Trouts there be good store in every brook,
ordinarily two and twenty inches
- John Josselyn New England 1674
60Brook trout are extirpated from 29 of the
subwatersheds and reduced gt 50 in another 35
- The majority of large riverine habitats are gone
61Presence does not equal persistence
62Even with no further degradation many of the
Reduced gt 50 populations could become Extirpated.
- No connectivity or redundancy to reestablish
populations after stochastic events - Exotics fill in
- 330 subwatersheds highly vulnerable to extirpation
63I have given the matter considerable thought,
and frankly I can think of not one stream that I
would classify as predominately brook trout. This
state and neighboring states have spent most of
their time and money stocking brown trout in what
were good brook trout waters
- All about Brook Trout from Maine to California
Bob Elliot 1950
64Exotics, Exotics, Exotics!!!
- Biggest non land use threat
- Rainbow trout in south east
- Brown trout in New York, New England
- Smallmouth bass in lakes
- Metric ??
65If you dont know where you are going any road
will get you there !
66Important quantitative data gaps exist for many
stream habitats (33 ) in large portions of
Maine, New Hampshire, New York with smaller gaps
in portions of Vermont, Massachusetts and West
Virginia.
- Need to validate the predictive models
- Quantitative needed for monitoring land use
changes and exotics
67very large and nice trout were formerly caught
here but since the introduction of pickerel about
the year 1820 but very few trout have been
taken
68Lake populations have all but been eliminated
except for a few strong holds in Maine
- Vulnerable to exotics
- Vulnerable to land ownership changes
69While many extirpations and losses occurred at
the turn of the century, many documented losses
have occurred in the last ten years.
- 75,000 dams
- 2 million miles road
- 90 million people
70Land use metrics at the subwatershed level are
useful predictors of brook trout for land managers
71Core Metric Total Forest
- Land managers should be concerned as Total
Forested in the subwatershed drops below 68 - Only 6 of Intact gt 50 subwatersheds have less
than 68 Total Forest. - 85 of Extirpated subwatersheds have less than
68 Total Forest
72Core Metric Agriculture
- Land managers should be concerned if the
Agriculture in the subwatershed is in the 12-19
range or greater - Only 17 of Intact gt 50 subwatersheds have
greater than 19 Agriculture - 74 of Extirpated subwatersheds have greater than
12 Agriculture
73Core Metric NO3 SO4 Deposition (kg/ha)
- Land managers should be concerned if the
Deposition in the subwatershed is in the 24 - 33
kg/ha range or greater - Only 23 of Intact gt 50 subwatersheds have a
Deposition greater than 33 kg/ha - 94 of Extirpated subwatersheds have a Deposition
greater than 24 kg/ha
74Core Metric Riparian Mixed Forest
- Land managers should be concerned if the
Riparian Mixed Forest in the subwatershed
corridor is less than the 17-20 range - Only 35 of Intact gt 50 subwatersheds have a
Riparian Mixed Forest less than 17 - 81 of Extirpated subwatersheds have a Riparian
Mixed Forest less than 20
75Core Metric Road Density (km/km2)
- Land managers should be concerned if the Road
Density in the subwatershed is in the 1.8-2.0
km/km2 range or greater - Only 17 of Intact gt 50 subwatersheds have a
Road Density greater than 1.8 km/km2 - 72 of Extirpated subwatersheds have a Road
Density greater than 2.0 km/km2
76Next steps Brook trout populations 2015 ?
77Brook trout Life Histories
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