Title: What is Variability ?
1What is Variability ?
- Change with location or through time in the
capacity of a freshwater system to support salmon
- Spatial Variation
- Natural variability in conditions
- Variable intensity of human impacts
- Interaction between watershed condition and human
effects - Temporal Variation
- Interannual variation in weather
- Catastrophic disturbance
- Cyclical or unidirectional changes in climate
- Spatial-Temporal segregation is artificial -
temporal changes in condition are a major factor
in creating spatial variation
2Variability in Annual Coho Production
Bisson and Bilby 1998
3(No Transcript)
4Factors Associated with Coho Salmon
Abundance Snohomish Basin
Pess et al. 2002
5Temporal Variation
- Year-to-year variation in flow, temperature etc.
- Life history specific effects
- Examples
- Winter floods - decreased egg-fry survival
- Spring high flows - increase fry emigration
- Summer drought - decreased summer fry survival
and growth - Autumn high flow - enhanced access to spawning
habitat - Long-term variations
- Recovery from disturbance
- Climatic changes (PDO, global warming)
6Winter Flow and Population Performance
Unpublished data, Beamer and Pess (with apologies)
7Temporal Changes in Salmonid Production
E
high
C
F
A
Productivity
D
B
low
Time Since Disturbance (yrs)
8Temporal Changes in Salmonid Diversity
9Coho Salmon Productivity after the Eruption of
Mt. St. Helens
Juvenile Coho Production (mg/m2/d)
Year
Bisson et al. 1997
10Disturbed Site
Density (fish/m2)
Buffered Site
Density (fish/m2)
11Thrash Creek Biomass 3.00 g/m2
Beaver Creek Biomass 3.28 g/m2
5 Years after Disturbance
60 Years after Disturbance
Hicks et al. 1991
12Patterns in Stream Productivity
Low
Medium
High
13Questions
- 1) How can variability be incorporated into
predictions of salmon capacity, growth and
productivity? - 2) What are the largest sources of uncertainty in
predicting salmon response to freshwater habitat
conditions? - 3) What alternative scenarios of current and
future conditions should the model strive to
explore? - 4) At what spatial scale should wood abundance be
characterized to be most meaningful to salmon? - 5) What habitat is most important freshwater,
estuarine or marine? - 6) What nutrient contribution from salmon
carcasses is required to achieve maximum smolt
production? How can this aspect of habitat be
incorporated into the model?
14Q 12 Incorporating Variability
- Spatially explicit predictions - recognize that
not all places are equal and a few locations can
support the majority of all freshwater production - Most influential life history stage varies
interannually build in hydrological
fluctuations (flood, drought) and adjust the
survival of the affected life history stage
accordingly - Major disturbance events cause predictable
patterns of change in productivity - Recognize that the performance of the fish at one
stage influences survival later in life higher
spring-summer growth rates increase overwinter
survival larger smolt size increases marine
survival - Failure to include factors other than physical
habitat in relationships to salmon production a
major source of uncertainty in current modeling
approaches
15What is Salmon Habitat?
.
- Combination of physical, chemical and biological
attributes - Physical
- Access
- Sediment levels, channel morphology
- Chemical
- Water temperature
- Contaminants
- Nutrient availability
- Biological
- Primary and secondary production
- Competition and predation
16Q 3 Habitat Scenarios
- High Quality Salmon Habitat
- Low Elevation
- Low Gradient Channels
- Diversity of Riparian and Channel Conditions
- Low-level of Human Influence
- People and Salmon Occupy Similar Habitats
17Urbanization Effects on Fish Communities
Coho
0
20
40
60
Urbanization ( Impervious Area)
of fish community composed of coho salmon with
increasing levels of urbanization for 11
watersheds in King County, Washington. From
Lucchetti and Furstenberg 1993.
18Population in King, Pierce and Snohomish Counties
19Alternative Growth Scenarios
- Future development will disproportionately impact
sites with high productive potential - Evaluate effect of different patterns of
development - Concentrate new growth in already populated areas
- Unrestricted development focused on low relief,
low elevation locations - Current zoning plans
20Q 4 Appropriate Scale for Wood
- Wood-fish relationships are tenuous
- Relates to failure to consider other aspects of
habitat - Best relationships with winter abundance of coho
salmon - Ideally, wood abundance and distribution at the
watershed scale - Response to wood in a reach with a mix of
conditions typically associated with high
production will be greater than in a reach with
poorer underlying condition for the fish
21Q 5 Which Habitat is Most Important
- Answer - All
- Relative importance vary with conditions
- Poor freshwater habitat and extreme weather
conditions sufficient mortality may occur prior
to smolting to preclude adjustments later - More benign freshwater conditions and enough
smolts may be produced to exceed estuarine
capacity - Recent experience on the Columbia indicates the
significance of early marine rearing condition - All habitats are connected
- Freshwater conditions can influence smolt size
and number - affects survival in the estuary and
ocean - Estuarine conditions can also effect size and
number of fish entering the ocean - Ocean conditions dictate adult growth and
survival, influences the number of fish returning
and delivering nutrients to freshwater -
influences freshwater habitat condition
22Q 6 Nutrient Contribution from Spawning Salmon
Average Weight (g)
salmon carcasses present
Bilby et al. 1998
23Sample Locations
Clallam
Hoko
Skagit
Dickey
Soleduck
Skykomish
Bogachiel
Snoqualmie
Hoh
Deschutes
Chehalis
Willapa
24Index of 15N Enrichment
Carcass Availability (kg/m2)
Bilby et al. 2001
25Approximate 15N Saturation Level
Bilby et al. 2001