SURVIVAL AND SELECTION OF MIGRATING SALMON FROM CAPTURE–RECAPTURE MODELS WITH INDIVIDUAL TRAITS

Autor: James L. Congleton, Tyler Wagner, John G. Williams, Richard W. Zabel, Steven G. Smith
Rok vydání: 2005
Předmět:
Zdroj: Ecological Applications. 15:1427-1439
ISSN: 1051-0761
DOI: 10.1890/04-0940
Popis: Capture-recapture studies are powerful tools for studying animal population dynamics, providing information on population abundance, survival rates, population growth rates, and selection for phenotypic traits. In these studies, the probability of ob- serving a tagged individual reflects both the probability of the individual surviving to the time of recapture and the probability of recapturing an animal, given that it is alive. If both of these probabilities are related to the same phenotypic trait, it can be difficult to distinguish effects on survival probabilities from effects on recapture probabilities. However, when animals are individually tagged and have multiple opportunities for recapture, we can properly partition observed trait-related variability into survival and recapture components. We present an overview of capture-recapture models that incorporate individual variability and develop methods to incorporate results from these models into estimates of population survival and selection for phenotypic traits. We conducted a series of simulations to un- derstand the performance of these estimators and to assess the consequences of ignoring individual variability when it exists. In addition, we analyzed a large data set of > 153 000 juvenile chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) and steelhead (0. mykiss) of known length that were PIT-tagged during their seaward migration. Both our simulations and the case study indicated that the ability to precisely estimate selection for phenotypic traits was greatly compromised when differential recapture probabilities were ignored. Estimates of population survival, however, were far more robust. In the chinook salmon and steelhead study, we consistently found that smaller fish had a greater probability of recapture. We also uncovered length-related survival relationships in over half of the release group/river segment combinations that we observed, but we found both positive and negative rela- tionships between length and survival probability. These results have important implications for the management of salmonid populations.
Databáze: OpenAIRE