Trends in wild adult steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss)
abundance for snowmelt-driven watersheds of British Columbia in relation to
freshwater discharge
Barry D. Smith
Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci./J. Can. Sci. Halieut. Aquat. 57(2): 285-297 (2000)
Abstract: Snowmelt-driven
rivers of British Columbia support primarily summer-run steelhead (Oncorhynchus
mykiss) that may spend up to 5 years as juveniles in freshwater. Time
series analyses revealed significant negative correlations between an annual
index of wild adult steelhead abundance (catch-per-angler-day, CpAD) for these
rivers and summer freshwater discharge when these steelhead were juveniles. The
strength of these relationships was related to latitude, with the more
northerly rivers generating the strongest relationship between CpAD and
freshwater discharge. Potential mechanisms by which interannual variation in
freshwater discharge can modulate adult steelhead abundance include reduced
juvenile mortality due to lower flow velocities during the warm summer months
and to the creation of more juvenile habitat in low-velocity refuges.
Alternatively, interannual variability in adult steelhead abundance is driven
by variability in ocean climate of which freshwater discharge is an index.
Interpretation of the data and analyses was encumbered in part by particular
factors affecting CpAD as an index of abundance. However, the analyses support
an interpretation that steelhead survival to adulthood might be influenced by
freshwater conditions more so in northern snowmelt-driven rivers than in
rainfall-driven rivers because steelhead from those rivers spend more years in
freshwater as juveniles.