Abstract

We collected fishes and habitat data at 138 streams to evaluate the effects of introduced brown trout ( Salmo trutta) and habitat conditions on occurrence, detection, abundance, and size structure of sculpin ( Cottus spp.), longnose dace ( Rhinichthys cataractae), and southern redbelly dace ( Chrosomus erythrogaster) in the Driftless Area, USA. Sculpin detection decreased with increasing stream velocity, whereas southern redbelly dace detection increased with stream depth. Sculpin occupancy declined with increasing stream temperature and velocity and increased with increasing forested land, boulder substrate, and brown trout length and abundance. Longnose and southern redbelly dace occupancy and abundance declined with increasing brown trout abundance and occupancy increased with stream temperature. Longnose dace occupancy also increased with increasing stream temperature and cobble substrate and declined with increasing elevation. Native fish size structure was unrelated to brown trout presence. Our results suggest that effects of brown trout are not ubiquitous across native fishes and depend on abiotic conditions and species-specific habitat requirements, highlighting the need to consider both biotic and abiotic conditions when balancing native species conservation with introduced sportfish management.

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