Effects of interspecific competition on recruitment processes for rainbow trout in simple two fish-species lakes

This thesis explores how competition and predation by coexisting fish species affect recruitment (number of hatched larvae recruiting into the population). The study is primarily based on field manipulations on a series of eight lakes found in two parallel watersheds, each with two species of fish:...

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Main Author: van Poorten, Brett Theodore
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/42581
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-425812018-01-05T17:25:52Z Effects of interspecific competition on recruitment processes for rainbow trout in simple two fish-species lakes van Poorten, Brett Theodore This thesis explores how competition and predation by coexisting fish species affect recruitment (number of hatched larvae recruiting into the population). The study is primarily based on field manipulations on a series of eight lakes found in two parallel watersheds, each with two species of fish: rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss, referred to as trout) and northern pikeminnow (Ptychocheilus oregonensis, referred to as pikeminnow). Different lakes had adults of one species or the other depleted to observe how recruitment changed in response. However, earlier research discovered that pikeminnow populations ontogenetically move between lakes so that each watershed was a single treatment rather than individual lakes. The lakes were followed for up to eight years to examine how interspecific interactions affect survival of hatched trout and resultant recruitment into each lake. My first objective was to estimate variation in growth and consumption of each population over the course of the study. I first evaluated estimates of growth and consumption provided by a new bioenergetics model, called the general bioenergetics model and compared them with estimates from the most commonly used bioenergetics model for fish called the Wisconsin model. Estimates of growth were improved over that from the Wisconsin model, although estimates of consumption were similar between models. I then adapted the general bioenergetics model to permit net consumption rate, to vary over time and across populations. Results showed that growth was quite variable over time for trout, and less so for pikeminnow. Growth responses did not appear to be related to density manipulations. My second objective was to incorporate estimated growth into a length-based age-structured mark recapture model, which estimates density and recruitment for each species and population. Although recruitment appeared to respond to depletion of the same species, manipulation of the other species did not appear to have a noticeable impact. My final objective was to develop a multi-species recruitment model to see how competition and predation across species would impact larval survival. Results were inconclusive, but generated useful hypotheses regarding the strength of competitive and predatory impacts in this particular study system. Science, Faculty of Zoology, Department of Graduate 2012-06-29T17:54:48Z 2012-06-29T17:54:48Z 2012 2012-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/42581 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description This thesis explores how competition and predation by coexisting fish species affect recruitment (number of hatched larvae recruiting into the population). The study is primarily based on field manipulations on a series of eight lakes found in two parallel watersheds, each with two species of fish: rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss, referred to as trout) and northern pikeminnow (Ptychocheilus oregonensis, referred to as pikeminnow). Different lakes had adults of one species or the other depleted to observe how recruitment changed in response. However, earlier research discovered that pikeminnow populations ontogenetically move between lakes so that each watershed was a single treatment rather than individual lakes. The lakes were followed for up to eight years to examine how interspecific interactions affect survival of hatched trout and resultant recruitment into each lake. My first objective was to estimate variation in growth and consumption of each population over the course of the study. I first evaluated estimates of growth and consumption provided by a new bioenergetics model, called the general bioenergetics model and compared them with estimates from the most commonly used bioenergetics model for fish called the Wisconsin model. Estimates of growth were improved over that from the Wisconsin model, although estimates of consumption were similar between models. I then adapted the general bioenergetics model to permit net consumption rate, to vary over time and across populations. Results showed that growth was quite variable over time for trout, and less so for pikeminnow. Growth responses did not appear to be related to density manipulations. My second objective was to incorporate estimated growth into a length-based age-structured mark recapture model, which estimates density and recruitment for each species and population. Although recruitment appeared to respond to depletion of the same species, manipulation of the other species did not appear to have a noticeable impact. My final objective was to develop a multi-species recruitment model to see how competition and predation across species would impact larval survival. Results were inconclusive, but generated useful hypotheses regarding the strength of competitive and predatory impacts in this particular study system. === Science, Faculty of === Zoology, Department of === Graduate
author van Poorten, Brett Theodore
spellingShingle van Poorten, Brett Theodore
Effects of interspecific competition on recruitment processes for rainbow trout in simple two fish-species lakes
author_facet van Poorten, Brett Theodore
author_sort van Poorten, Brett Theodore
title Effects of interspecific competition on recruitment processes for rainbow trout in simple two fish-species lakes
title_short Effects of interspecific competition on recruitment processes for rainbow trout in simple two fish-species lakes
title_full Effects of interspecific competition on recruitment processes for rainbow trout in simple two fish-species lakes
title_fullStr Effects of interspecific competition on recruitment processes for rainbow trout in simple two fish-species lakes
title_full_unstemmed Effects of interspecific competition on recruitment processes for rainbow trout in simple two fish-species lakes
title_sort effects of interspecific competition on recruitment processes for rainbow trout in simple two fish-species lakes
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/42581
work_keys_str_mv AT vanpoortenbretttheodore effectsofinterspecificcompetitiononrecruitmentprocessesforrainbowtroutinsimpletwofishspecieslakes
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