Abstract
Spawn timing in anadromous Pacific salmon may be especially sensitive to environmental cues such as river temperature and flow regimes. In this study, we explored correlations between peak spawn timing and water temperature in endangered Sacramento River winter-run Chinook Salmon. In recent drought years, rising water temperatures during egg incubation have negatively affected the winter-run Chinook Salmon population. This paper seeks to understand how winter-run spawn timing may be affected by temperatures during the staging period prior to spawning, and how water releases from Shasta Dam might affect these dynamics. We fit a proportional-odds logistic regression model to evaluate annual spawn timing as a function of average temperatures in April and May below Keswick Dam. While the start date of spawning remains relatively constant from year to year, the timing of peak spawning varies annually. Cool springtime temperatures trigger winter-run Chinook Salmon to spawn earlier, whereas warm springtime temperatures trigger fish to spawn later. Before dam construction, winter-run Chinook Salmon spawned in cool, spring-fed streams that are now inaccessible to migrating salmonids. In their natal spawning grounds, temperature-driven spawn timing would have primarily ensured sufficient time for egg maturation in cool years, while secondarily preventing egg and alevin mortality in warm years. In the current winter-run spawning grounds, the relationship between temperature and spawn timing may have important applications to management of Shasta Dam water releases, especially during conditions when thermal mortality can affect developing winter-run Chinook Salmon eggs.
Highlights
The reproductive cycle in anadromous salmonids consists of two events that are not necessarily synchronous (e.g., LovellFord 2013): upstream migration from the ocean to river systems; and the spawning event, whereby a mate and nestingSAN FRANCISCO ESTUARY & WATERSHED SCIENCEVOLUME 18, ISSUE 2, ARTICLE 5 site are selected, and eggs are deposited into redds in the gravel
Regardless of springtime water temperatures, the first observed spawning female was recorded each year within a short range of dates (April 23–May 1)
Years with average April–May temperatures (2000, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2010–2012) varied in temporal distribution of spawn timing, with some years conforming more to patterns associated with cool spring temperatures (e.g., 2000, 2002, 2010), and others conforming to warm spring temperature patterns (e.g., 2011, 2012)
Summary
VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2, ARTICLE 5 site are selected, and eggs are deposited into redds (nests) in the gravel. Reproductive success requires both the presence of potential mates, as well as specific habitat conditions that may be temporally limited. Once salmon are present at spawning grounds, spawning activity appears to be triggered by certain environmental cues, most notably flow and temperature. Increased Stillaguamish River flow may expand the availability of suitable spawning sites, but it generally decreases stream temperature. Correlations between spawn timing and stream temperature are believed to synchronize spawning behavior to match ideal environmental conditions during the period of juvenile emergence (Miller and Brannon 1982; Brannon 1984; Angilletta et al 2008). Salmon species may have preferred thermal limits for spawning activity or egg survival (Beacham and Murray 1990)
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