Abstract

Associations of fishes in physically distinct habitats (riffles, inlets and pools) of Flint Creek were studied to evaluate critically the habitat-guild concept — the notion that fishes associate with patches of stream habitat in discrete groups. There was little evidence of significant interspecific association at the habitat level. Most fishes were very generalized in their habitat-use patterns. Faunal similarity between habitats was unrelated to physical-habitat similarity. Assemblages from physically distinct habitats were little different from those from physically similar habitats. The structure of the associations (constancy within groups of commonly occurring species) varied seasonally and from site to site. There were constant associations in pools from summer through fall and this coincided with conditions of high fish density and low food availability, suggesting that the pattern resulted from past or present interaction between species. However, the timing also coincided with recruitment of young. Pools were the favored habitats of young-of-year fishes which dominated assemblages in these areas during summer and fall months. This apparently adaptive pattern of habitat association, operating in tandem with local reproductive success could have been responsible for the constancy observed in pools. Most of the species considered here made use of a variety of habitat conditions over the course of their life histories. Individual patches of habitat satisfied the needs of few fish, and thus, seemed too small a scale for the study of community-assembly mechanisms. There was better evidence of interspecies association at the scale of two or more of these habitat areas combined.

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