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Association of brook trout and Oncorhynchus spp. with large wood jams in a Lake Superior tributary in a northern old‐growth watershed
Authors:Arthur E L Morris  Lance R Williams  P Charles Goebel  Eugene C Braig IV
Institution:1. Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, School of Environment and Natural Resources, The Ohio State University, , Wooster, OH, USA;2. Department of Biology, University of Texas at Tyler, , Tyler, TX, USA;3. F.T. Stone Laboratory and Ohio Sea Grant College Program, The Ohio State University, , Columbus, OH, USA
Abstract:Wood in streams functions as fish habitat, but relationships between fish abundance (or size) and large wood in streams are not consistent. One possible reason for variable relationships between fish and wood in streams is that the association of fish with wood habitat may depend on ecological context such as large‐scale geomorphology. We studied the relationship between salmonid assemblages and large wood jams (LWJ) in four settings that differed geomorphically at the scale of the stream corridor along a tributary to Lake Superior in old‐growth conifer–hardwood forest in northern Michigan. The focal fish species of this study were brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis), which were wild in the stream. Relocation efforts for coaster brook trout (an adfluvial life history variant of brook trout) were ongoing in the study stream. We measured fish abundance and length in pairs of pools of similar size and substrate, but varying in the presence of LWJ; this allowed us to evaluate associations of fish simply with the presence of LWJ rather than with other channel or flow‐shaping functions of LWJ. The length of Oncorhynchus spp. and young introduced brook trout was not strongly correlated with LWJ presence; however, the presence of LWJ in pools was positively correlated with larger wild brook trout. We also found that the correspondence of LWJ with the abundance of salmonids appears to be moderated by the presence of alternative habitat in this relatively natural, old‐growth forest stream.
Keywords:brook trout  geomorphology  large wood  large wood jams  ecological restoration  geomorphology
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