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- Title
Density-dependent mortality in Pacific salmon: the ghost of impacts past?
- Authors
Achord, Stephen; Levin, Phillip S.; Zabel, Richard W.
- Abstract
Abstract Conservation biologists often ignore density dependence because at-risk populations are typically small relative to historical levels. However, if populations are reduced as a result of impacts that lower carrying capacity, then density-dependent mortality may exist at low population abundances. Here, we explore this issue in threatened populations of juvenile chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha ). We followed the fate of more than 50 000 juvenile chinook in the Snake River Basin, USA to test the hypothesis that their survival was inversely associated with juvenile density. We also tested the hypotheses that non-indigenous brook trout and habitat quality affect the presence or strength of density dependence. Our results indicate that juvenile chinook suffer density-dependent mortality and the strength of density dependence was greater in streams in which brook trout were absent. We were unable to detect an effect of habitat quality on the strength of density dependence. Historical impacts of humans have greatly reduced population sizes of salmon, and the density dependence we report may stem from a shortage of nutrients normally derived from decomposing salmon carcasses. Cohorts of juvenile salmon may experience density-dependent mortality at population sizes far below historical levels and recovery of imperiled populations may be much slower than currently expected.
- Subjects
PACIFIC salmon; MORTALITY; ECOLOGY
- Publication
Ecology Letters, 2003, Vol 6, Issue 4, p335
- ISSN
1461-023X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1046/j.1461-0248.2003.00438.x