Abstract

Longitudinal dispersal of migratory fish species can be interrupted by factors that fragment rivers, such as dams and reservoirs with incompatible habitats, and indirect alterations to variables, such as water temperature or turbidity. The endangered pallid sturgeon (Scaphirhynchus albus) population in the Upper Missouri River Basin in North Dakota and Montana is an example of such fragmentation and alteration due to the construction of dams. We applied a high-resolution, 2+-dimensional modelling framework composed of hydrodynamic and Lagrangian particle tracking components to simulate pallid sturgeon larval drift and dispersal along a 33-km section of the Upper Missouri River to evaluate three main issues: a comparison between multidimensional models and traditional 1-dimensional models, the sensitivity of hydrodynamics to channel morphology, and the implications of channel morphology on retention and transport-time metrics for larval fish. The results indicate that multidimensional models better represent breakthrough curves of transporting larvae compared to 1-dimensional models, especially for the long tail of slow drifters in the population. Results also indicate that channel morphology and hydraulic complexity play significant roles in larval dispersal with certain flow conditions and channel features increasing larval retention and providing potential management options to increase survival rates by adjusting flow conditions during spawning events. For example, modelling indicates increased retention times at discharges 23–38% daily flow exceedance, coincident with emergence of mid-channel sandbars. Findings additionally emphasize the need for improved understanding of biological factors that affect larval drift and dispersal.

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