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1 January 2010 Ecology of Winter Concealment Behavior of Juvenile Spring Chinook Salmon in the Grande Ronde River Basin, Oregon
Erick S. Van Dyke, Dennis L. Scarnecchia, Brian C. Jonasson, Richard W. Carmichael
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Abstract

We characterized winter concealment behavior (WCB) for juvenile spring Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) from October through January in three study streams of the Grande Ronde River Basin, Oregon. The Nocturnal Index (NI), the frequency of fish using WCB, increased significantly as mean daily water temperature decreased. WCB was negatively associated with mean daily water temperature in all three streams, and positively associated with fish size in Catherine Creek and the Lostine River. WCB was not significantly associated with fish density in any of the three streams. Both the NI and detections of concealed fish indicated that fish were concealing amid interstitial spaces during the day and emerging at night as early as October-November, yet no population fully exhibited WCB during any month sampled. Although low water temperature influenced WCB in the Grande Ronde River Basin, other ecological factors affected the behavior because not all fish used WCB even when mean daily water temperatures were < 1°C.

© 2010 by the Northwest Scientific Association.
Erick S. Van Dyke, Dennis L. Scarnecchia, Brian C. Jonasson, and Richard W. Carmichael "Ecology of Winter Concealment Behavior of Juvenile Spring Chinook Salmon in the Grande Ronde River Basin, Oregon," Northwest Science 84(1), 9-19, (1 January 2010). https://doi.org/10.3955/046.084.0102
Received: 21 February 2008; Accepted: 1 February 2009; Published: 1 January 2010
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