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Document Description
Title
Habitat
selection
in
Brook
Trout
,
Salvelinus
fontinalis
Author
Knight
,
Thomas
W.
,
1965-
Description
Thesis
(Ph.D.)
,
Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
2000.
Biology
Date
2000
Pagination
xiv, 136 leaves : ill., maps.
Subject
Brook
trout--Habitat--Newfoundland
and
Labrador--Cape
Race
Degree
Ph.D.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of Biology
Discipline
Biology
Language
Eng
Spatial Coverage
Canada--Newfoundland and Labrador--Avalon Peninsula--Cape Race Region
Notes
Bibliography:
leaves
109-129
Abstract
I
combined
field
and
laboratory
experiments
to
test
theories
of
density-dependent
habitat
selection
and
habitat
preference
in
brook
trout
(Salvetinus
fontinalis)
from
Cape
Race
,
Newfoundland
,
Canada.
My
primary
objective
was to
test
whether
theory
allows
us to
correctly
infer
the
behaviour
of
individuals
in a
population
based
only
on
field
census
data.
Secondarily
,
I
tested
whether
patterns
of
habitat
use
are
influenced
by the
habitat
composition
of a
river
as
indicated
by
models
of
evolution
in
heterogeneous
landscapes.
--
Theories
of
density-dependent
habitat
selection
predict
that
competitive
interference
for
preferred
sites
should
produce
curvilinear
or
non-linear
relationships
in
population
density.
I
tested
the
theory
by
manipulating
population
densities
of
brook
trout
in
four
separate
stream
enclosures
containing
flat
and
riffle
habitats.
Regressions
of
density
in the
paired
habitats
(isodars)
were
curvilinear
,
suggesting
that
brook
trout
are
site-dependent
habitat
selectors.
Body-size
distributions
between
flat
and
riffle
habitats
were
consistent
with the
hypothesis
of
site
pre-emption
by
larger
,
presumably
dominant
individuals.
The
isodar
analysis
,
based
only
on
density
data
,
revealed
the
competitive
behaviours
that are
believed
to
underlie
brook
trout
distributions.
--
To
test
whether
individual
behaviour
is
consistent
with the
hypothesis
of
site
dependence
,
I
used
observations
of
brook
trout
in an
experimental
stream
tank.
Brook
trout
were
introduced
into the
stream
tank
over
a
range
of
population
densities
, at
two
flow
treatments
, and their
precise
location
was
mapped
at
consistent
intervals
over
2
to
3
days.
My
observations
support
the
site-dependent
model
of
habitat
selection
,
confirming
3
a
priori
predictions:
1)
brook
trout
recognise
and
respond
to
differences
in
site
quality;
2)
individuals
select
the
highest
quality
site
available;
3)
larger
,
presumably
dominant
,
individuals
occupy
the
sites
of
highest
quality.
Observed
habitat-selecting
behaviour
is
consistent
with
behaviour
inferred
from
population
census
data
,
further
supporting
ideas
of
density-dependent
habitat
selection
and
strengthening
the
theoretical
basis
of
isodar
analysis.
--
Finally
,
I
tested
whether
habitat
use
differs
between
populations
as
predicted
by
theoretical
models
of
evolution
among
heterogeneous
landscapes.
Habitat
preferences
of
brook
trout
captured
from
two
isolated
rivers
were
observed
in an
experimental
stream
tank.
Individuals
from a
river
composed
primarily
of
flat
habitat
used
the
flat
portion
of the
stream
tank
significantly
more
than
brook
trout
from a
river
composed
primarily
of
riffle
habitat.
I
conclude
that
habitat
preference
in
salmonid
fish
may
evolve
partially
in
response
to the
landscape
composition
of a
given
watershed.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
a1477606
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(13.86
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Knight_ThomasW.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
125642.cpd