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Exploring metapopulation-scale suppression alternatives for a global invader in a river network experiencing climate change
Authors:Brian D Healy  Phaedra Budy  Charles B Yackulic  Brendan P Murphy  Robert C Schelly  Mark C McKinstry
Institution:1. Department of Watershed Sciences and the Ecology Center, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, USA;2. U.S. Geological Survey, Utah Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, Department of Watershed Sciences, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, USA;3. U.S. Geological Survey, Southwest Biological Science Center, Grand Canyon Monitoring and Research Center, Flagstaff, Arizona, USA;4. School of Environmental Science, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada;5. Native Fish Ecology and Conservation Program, Division of Science and Resource Management, Grand Canyon National Park, National Park Service, Flagstaff, Arizona, USA;6. Upper Colorado Regional Office, U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
Abstract:Invasive species can dramatically alter ecosystems, but eradication is difficult, and suppression is expensive once they are established. Uncertainties in the potential for expansion and impacts by an invader can lead to delayed and inadequate suppression, allowing for establishment. Metapopulation viability models can aid in planning strategies to improve responses to invaders and lessen invasive species’ impacts, which may be particularly important under climate change. We used a spatially explicit metapopulation viability model to explore suppression strategies for ecologically damaging invasive brown trout (Salmo trutta), established in the Colorado River and a tributary in Grand Canyon National Park. Our goals were to estimate the effectiveness of strategies targeting different life stages and subpopulations within a metapopulation; quantify the effectiveness of a rapid response to a new invasion relative to delaying action until establishment; and estimate whether future hydrology and temperature regimes related to climate change and reservoir management affect metapopulation viability and alter the optimal management response. Our models included scenarios targeting different life stages with spatially varying intensities of electrofishing, redd destruction, incentivized angler harvest, piscicides, and a weir. Quasi-extinction (QE) was obtainable only with metapopulation-wide suppression targeting multiple life stages. Brown trout population growth rates were most sensitive to changes in age 0 and large adult mortality. The duration of suppression needed to reach QE for a large established subpopulation was 12 years compared with 4 with a rapid response to a new invasion. Isolated subpopulations were vulnerable to suppression; however, connected tributary subpopulations enhanced metapopulation persistence by serving as climate refuges. Water shortages driving changes in reservoir storage and subsequent warming would cause brown trout declines, but metapopulation QE was achieved only through refocusing and increasing suppression. Our modeling approach improves understanding of invasive brown trout metapopulation dynamics, which could lead to more focused and effective invasive species suppression strategies and, ultimately, maintenance of populations of endemic fishes.
Keywords:conservation  demographic rates  flow-ecology  introduced species  Lefkovitch matrix  non-native salmonid  population dynamics  conservación  dinámicas poblacionales  ecología de flujos  especie introducida  matriz de Lefkovitch  salmónido no nativo  tasas demográficas  保护  种群统计  Lefkovitch矩阵  种群动态  流量生态学  引入物种  外来鲑科鱼类
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