Foodscapes for salmon and other mobile consumers in river networks

Author:

Rossi Gabriel J1ORCID,Bellmore J Ryan2ORCID,Armstrong Jonathan B3,Jeffres Carson4,Naman Sean M5,Carlson Stephanie M1ORCID,Grantham Theodore E1ORCID,Kaylor Matthew J6,White Seth37,Katz Jacob8,Power Mary E9ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management

2. Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station of the United States Department of Agriculture , Juneau, Alaska , United States

3. Department of Fisheries, Wildlife and Conservation Sciences

4. University of California Davis, Center for Watershed Sciences , Davis, California , United States

5. Freshwater Ecosystems Section for Fisheries and Oceans Canada in Cultus Lake , British Columbia , Canada

6. Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission , Portland, Oregon , United States

7. Oregon Hatchery Research Center at Oregon State University   Corvallis, Oregon , United States

8. California Trout , Woodland, California , United States

9. Department of Integrative Biology at the University of California at Berkeley , Berkeley, California , United States

Abstract

Abstract Mobile consumers track fluctuating resources across heterogeneous landscapes to grow and survive. In river networks, the abundance and accessibility of food and the energetic consequences of foraging vary among habitats and through time, providing a shifting mosaic of growth opportunities for mobile consumers. However, a framework integrating the spatiotemporal dynamics of growth potential within riverscapes has been lacking. We present the concept of foodscapes to depict the dynamic changes in food abundance, food accessibility, and consumer physiology that contribute to spatial and temporal variation of fish growth in rivers. Drawing on case studies of salmonid fishes from Alaska to California, we illustrate how foodscapes can provide a plethora of foraging, growth, and life history opportunities that potentially contribute to population resilience. We identify knowledge gaps in understanding foodscapes and approaches for stewardship that focus on restoring diverse foraging and growth opportunities for fish and other mobile consumers in river networks.

Funder

National Science Foundation

California Trout

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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