TIMING, DISTRIBUTION, AND ABUNDANCE OF KOKANEES SPAWNING IN A LAKE TAHOE TRIBUTARY

Citation
Da. Beauchamp et al., TIMING, DISTRIBUTION, AND ABUNDANCE OF KOKANEES SPAWNING IN A LAKE TAHOE TRIBUTARY, The Great Basin naturalist, 54(2), 1994, pp. 130-141
Citations number
NO
Categorie Soggetti
Ecology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00173614
Volume
54
Issue
2
Year of publication
1994
Pages
130 - 141
Database
ISI
SICI code
0017-3614(1994)54:2<130:TDAAOK>2.0.ZU;2-8
Abstract
We counted kokanee spawners and carcasses every 1-7 days from mid-Sept ember through midNovember in 1991 and 1992 in Taylor Creek, a tributar y to Lake Tahoe, California-Nevada. Less than 1% of the spawning run e ntered Taylor Creek before flow from Fallen Leaf Lake was increased on 2 October 1991; in 1992 the peak occurred on 30 September or 1 Octobe r after flows increased on 29 September. In both years spawners concen trated in the middle three of five stream reaches below the impassable Fallen Leaf Lake dam. From tag-and-recovery experiments, the average longevity of male spawners in the stream was 3.5 days in 1991 and 2.8 days in 1992, whereas the average female longevity was 2.0 days in 199 1 and 2.3 days in 1992. Observed carcasses accounted for less than 10% of spawners counted, suggesting removal by scavengers or high predati on on prespawners. An estimated 1928 males and 1309 females spawned in 1991, and 8021 males and 8712 females spawned in 1992. Our estimate o f 3237 spawners in 1991 compared favorably to our estimate of 3520 +/- 1474 prespawners staging in Lake Tahoe in mid-September. An index of kokanee abundance in Lake Tahoe has historically been based on 1-day s urveys every 1 November since 1960; however, estimated total spawner a bundance was 19 times higher than the annual index of 158 spawners in 1991, and 141 times higher than the index count of 100 spawners in 199 2. The index count and mean fork lengths of spawners (278 +/- 10 mm [2 SE] for males, and 248 +/- 3 mm for females) in 1991 and 1992 were th e lowest on record.