PATTERNS OF MOVEMENT AND HABITAT USE BY NORTHERN HOG SUCKERS IN AN OZARK STREAM

Citation
Mp. Matheney et Cf. Rabeni, PATTERNS OF MOVEMENT AND HABITAT USE BY NORTHERN HOG SUCKERS IN AN OZARK STREAM, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society, 124(6), 1995, pp. 886-897
Citations number
44
Categorie Soggetti
Fisheries
ISSN journal
00028487
Volume
124
Issue
6
Year of publication
1995
Pages
886 - 897
Database
ISI
SICI code
0002-8487(1995)124:6<886:POMAHU>2.0.ZU;2-V
Abstract
Although the northern hog sucker Hypentelium nigricans is widely distr ibuted throughout the Mississippi and Ohio river basins and is both ec ologically and recreationally important, much of its basic ecology is not known. We determined movement and habitat use for 25 fish in the C urrent River, Missouri, for 1 year using radio telemetry. Seasonal mov ements were recorded two or three times each week during daylight hour s from January to November 1988. Diel movement and habitat use were re corded once each hour for 17 d in winter and 12 d in summer. Mean dail y distance traveled was greater in summer (425 m) than in winter (276 m). Home range was greater in winter and spring (812 m) than in summer and fall (426 m). Habitat use changed seasonally from slower, deeper water and smaller substrates during winter to increasing use of faster , shallower water and larger substrates through warmer-water periods. In both seasons, fish had a consistent daily pattern, moving more duri ng the day than at night. Diel patterns of use were distinct. In winte r, fish used pool habitat with moderate flow during the day and riffle or edge habitat at night. In summer, fish used run habitat during the day and riffle or edge habitat at night. Patterns of habitat use indi cated fish used one area of the river during the day to feed and anoth er at night to rest. Fish remained in their home area during high-flow events but used flooded riparian areas where current velocities were lower. Fish moved up- or downstream short distances (mean = 497 m, N = 7) into spawning areas during late February and early March, This stu dy emphasizes the importance of habitat diversity to accommodate this species' diel and seasonal preferences and the necessity of a connecte d floodplain for the fish to survive catastrophic events.