Abstract
This study uses Passive Integrated Transponder (PIT) technology to describe the habitat use patterns of the small, benthic redfin bully (Gobiomorphus huttoni). A 100-m reach of small upland stream in Manawatu, New Zealand was mapped to scale and inventoried for microhabitat variables. Flow velocity, depth, surface turbulence, substrate size and interstitial refuge space availability were measured in 0.25-m2 quadrats throughout the reach. A total of 67 redfin bullies were PIT tagged within the reach and monitored during day and night surveys in 2008 with a portable PIT monitoring system. Of these, 72 % were detected at least once and 64 % were detected 5 times or more within the study reach. Univariate analyses showed that redfin bullies utilized microhabitats that had larger substrate particles and more interstitial refuge spaces compared with all microhabitats available in the reach. During the day, redfin bullies were found in areas with larger substrates than areas where they were found at night. No differences in microhabitat use were found regarding gender, body size or season. Multivariate analysis revealed four macrohabitat types and showed that redfin bullies used deeper, complex macrohabitats during the day, then spread out to occupy all available macrohabitats at night. These findings have implications for river managers trying to cope with increasing anthropogenic impacts such as sedimentation.
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