Abstract

Abstract Motivated by a particular interest in the distribution of the nonindigenous, piscivorous Sacramento pikeminnow Ptychocheilus grandis, we examined fish-habitat relationships in small tributaries (draining 20-200 km2) in the Eel River drainage of northwestern California. We sampled juvenile and adult fish in 15 tributaries in both the summer and fall of 1995 and attempted to relate the densities of the most abundant species to physical variables. To determine which species used small tributaries for spawning, we also collected drifting larval fish during the spring of 1996 and 1997. Water temperature, as measured by maximum weekly average temperature, dominated the relationships between physical variables and the densities of age-0 Sacramento pikeminnow, age-0 steelhead Oncorhynchus mykiss, California roach Hesperoleucus symmetricus (also known as Lavinia symmetricus), and Sacramento sucker Catostomus occidentalis. Of these groups, only age-0 steelhead were most abundant in cool tributaries. In con...

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