Abstract

Our study evaluates the distribution, habitat associations, and current conservation status of the Snake River pilose crayfish Pacifastacus connectens (Faxon, 1914) and pilose crayfish Pacifastacus gambelii (Girard, 1852), two little-studied and data-deficient species endemic to the western United States. We first developed a species distribution model (SDM) for the pilose crayfishes based on their historical occurrence records using boosted regression trees and freshwater GIS data layers. We then sampled 163 sites in the summers of 2016 and 2017 within the distribution of these crayfishes, including 50 where these species were observed historically. We next compared our field results to modeled predictions of suitable habitat from the SDM. Our SDM predicted 73 sites (45%) we sampled as suitable for the pilose crayfishes, with a moderate AUC value of 0.824. The pilose crayfishes were generally predicted to occur in larger streams and rivers with less extreme upstream temperature and precipitation seasonality. We found the pilose crayfishes at only 20 (12%) of the 163 total sites we sampled, 14 (20%) of the 73 sites predicted as suitable for them by our SDM, and 12 (24%) of 50 historical sites that we sampled. We found the invasive virile crayfish Faxonius virilis (Hagen, 1870) at 22 sites total and 12 (24%) historical sites for the pilose crayfishes, and we found the “native invader” signal crayfish Pacifastacus leniusculus (Dana, 1852) at 29 sites total and 6 (12%) historical sites for the pilose crayfishes. We subsequently used a single classification tree to identify factors associated with our high rate of false positives for contemporary pilose crayfish distributions relative to our SDM. This classification tree identified the presence of invasive crayfishes, impairment of the benthic community, and sampling method as some of the factors differentiating false positives relative to true positives for the pilose crayfishes. Our study identified the historical distribution and habitat associations for P. connectens and P. gambelii using an SDM and contrasted this prediction to results of contemporary field sampling. We found that the pilose crayfishes have seemingly experienced substantial range declines, attributable to apparent displacement by invasive crayfishes and impairment or change to stream communities and habitat. We recommend increased conservation and management attention to P. connectens and P. gambelii in response to these findings.

Highlights

  • North America is home to the majority of the world’s crayfish diversity, with 414 described species (Richman et al, 2015; Crandall & De Grave, 2017)

  • Of the 50 historical sites we sampled, we found the pilose crayfishes at only 12 (24%), but we found F. virilis at 12 (24%) and P. leniusculus at 6 (12%)

  • We modeled suitable habitats for the pilose crayfishes P. connectens and P. gambelii based on their historical occurrence records using boosted regression trees and a series of environmental variables

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Summary

Introduction

North America is home to the majority of the world’s crayfish diversity, with 414 described species (Richman et al, 2015; Crandall & De Grave, 2017). Many of these North American crayfishes are highly imperiled and at risk of extinction. Given that two species of their genus have gone extinct or been listed as Endangered, we sought to evaluate the distribution, habitat associations, and conservation status of the pilose crayfishes P. connectens and P. gambelii

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