Abstract
AbstractPredicting whether anthropogenic sources of mortality have negative consequences at the level of population dynamics is challenged by mechanisms like density‐dependent survival that can amplify or offset the loss of individuals from anthropogenic disturbances. Run‐of‐river (RoR) hydropower is a growing industry that can cause frequent mortality of salmonid fry through rapid reductions in streamflow, leading to stranding on dewatered shores. However, whether individual‐level impacts reduce population growth rates or increase local extinction risk is difficult to predict. We used a stochastic stage‐structured matrix model to evaluate how the timing and magnitude of anthropogenic flow fluctuations impacted population abundance and extinction risk of coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch), which spend up to 1.5 yr in many streams regulated by RoR hydropower. We additionally assessed how the timing (spring, winter) and strength (weak, moderate, high) of natural density‐dependent bottlenecks experienced by salmon in freshwaters tempers or amplifies the potential for RoR‐induced mortality to scale to emergent population dynamics. We compared population sizes and the 45‐yr probability of quasi‐extinction under 12 scenarios that varied the frequency (0–20 events per year) and magnitude (1–10% mortality per event) of RoR‐induced flow fluctuations, as well as the timing and strength of density‐dependent bottlenecks occurring during the first year in freshwater. We found that even mild flow fluctuations by RoR hydropower can impact coho salmon population dynamics, especially if density dependence is weak or occurs early in freshwater residency (spring). When density dependence was strong and during winter, the potential for population‐level impact was lessened, but populations still declined by 13–42% when RoR‐induced mortality was severe (5–10%) or frequent (10–20 events/yr). We conclude that strong density‐dependent survival bottlenecks could partially mitigate the loss of fry from anthropogenic flow fluctuations, especially if bottlenecks occur late in freshwater residency, but not for all intensities of flow fluctuations. Even with strong density dependence in winter, our models predict declining populations by up to 70% under strong and very frequent flow fluctuations, which should serve to caution those tasked with regulating flows in streams affected by RoR hydropower.
Highlights
Many anthropogenic disturbances impact species by increasing mortality of individuals, but whether individual mortality scales up to affect species’ abundance or persistence remains difficult to predict (Fodrie et al 2014)
Our results demonstrate that mortality induced by flow fluctuations from the operation of RoR hydropower dams has the potential to affect emergent population dynamics of coho salmon populations
Both the strength and timing of density-dependent survival during the first year in freshwater were critical to predicting the impacts of anthropogenic flow fluctuations for population dynamics of coho salmon
Summary
Many anthropogenic disturbances impact species by increasing mortality of individuals, but whether individual mortality scales up to affect species’ abundance or persistence remains difficult to predict (Fodrie et al 2014). The presence of compensatory density dependence allows for sustainable harvest of exploited populations, by removing a proportion of the population that would have died during natural bottlenecks, and is central to the management of many species, for example, kangaroos (McCarthy 1996), palm trees (Freckleton et al 2003), and especially marine fish populations (Schaefer 1954, Beverton and Holt 1957, Hilborn and Walters 1992, Ricker 1992, Myers 2002). Higher compensatory reserve, defined as the reproductive rate in excess of what is needed to maintain growth and allowing a population to sustain stresses (Goodyear 1977), leads to a larger capacity for populations to maintain productivity despite additional mortality induced by anthropogenic removal (e.g., fishing) or disturbances (e.g., climate change, habitat degradation; Grossman and Simon 2020)
Published Version (
Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have