Abstract

During their seaward migration, juvenile salmonids encounter structural and visual cover which varies between and within watersheds. In this study, the effects of two types of cover (turbidity and artificial vegetation) on the predation mortality of juvenile salmonids exposed to fish piscivores was investigated in outdoor concrete ponds. During experiments, adult coastal cutthroat trout, Oncorhynchus clarkii clarkii, were allowed to feed on juvenile salmonid prey — chinook salmon, O. tshawytscha, chum salmon, O. keta, sockeye salmon, O. nerka, and cutthroat trout — in separate trials. Daily instantaneous per capita predation rate was determined for each turbidity and vegetation treatment, within each trial. Mean predation rates varied between 1% and 76% daily. In the presence of cover, mean daily predation rates were 10–75% lower than those in controls (no vegetation and clear water), depending on prey species. Predation rates were significantly lower in the presence of vegetation cover and did not covary with prey size or species. The effects of turbidity were generally not significant and were not additive with the effects of vegetation. However, turbidity appeared to significantly reduce the effectiveness of vegetation as cover for juvenile chinook and sockeye salmon. We suggest that these two forms of cover do not affect risk of predation by fish piscivores to juvenile salmonids via the same mechanism.

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