Are trout populations affected by reach-scale stream slope?
Daniel J. Isaak and Wayne A. Hubert
Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci./J. Can. Sci. Halieut. Aquat. 57(2): 468-477 (2000)
Abstract: Reach-scale
stream slope and the structure of associated physical habitats are thought to
affect trout populations, yet previous studies confound the effect of stream
slope with other factors that influence trout populations. We isolated the
effect of stream slope on trout populations by sampling reaches immediately
upstream and downstream of 23 marked changes in stream slope on 18 streams
across Wyoming and Idaho. No effect of stream slope on areal trout density was
observed, but when trout density was expressed volumetrically to control for
differences in channel cross sections among reaches in different slope classes,
the highest densities of trout occurred in medium-slope reaches, intermediate
densities occurred in high-slope reaches, and the lowest densities occurred in
low-slope reaches. The relative abundance of large trout was reciprocal to the
pattern in volumetric trout density. Trout biomass and species composition were
not affected by stream slope. Our results suggest that an assumption made by
many fish-habitat models, that populations are affected by the structure of
physical habitats, is at times untenable for trout populations in Rocky
Mountain streams and is contingent upon the spatial scale of investigation and
the population metric(s) used to describe populations.