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Movements of anadromous coastal cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus clarkii clarkii) in Puget Sound, Washington, USA

Anadromous salmonid species vary in their use of open ocean, coastal, and inland marine waters. To better understand this diversity in behavior and habitat use, 120 coastal cutthroat trout, Oncorhynchus clarkii clarkii , were caught in southern Puget Sound, Washington, USA, tagged with acoustic tran...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Environmental biology of fishes 2024-03, Vol.107 (3), p.319-334
Main Authors: Quinn, Thomas P., Arostegui, Martin C., Ellings, Christopher S., Goetz, Frederick, Losee, James P., Smith, Joseph M., Zaniewski (Haque), Sarah R.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Anadromous salmonid species vary in their use of open ocean, coastal, and inland marine waters. To better understand this diversity in behavior and habitat use, 120 coastal cutthroat trout, Oncorhynchus clarkii clarkii , were caught in southern Puget Sound, Washington, USA, tagged with acoustic transmitters, and 95 were detected by a network of receiver stations. Despite sufficient time to reach other parts of the Salish Sea where many receivers operated, none was detected beyond southern Puget Sound, indicating localized movements. Within southern Puget Sound, fish were detected at 34 of 127 receivers in marine sites throughout the year but especially in spring and fall. Most detection events (between first and last detections at a given receiver) were brief (60.5% were ≤ 2 h and 76.8% ≤ 6 h), indicating movement along the shoreline. However, 823 events (12.8%) exceeded 12 h and 222 (3.4%) exceeded 24 h at a receiver, indicating longer occupancy at certain sites and by certain individuals. The detections also indicated that cutthroat trout were active throughout the 24-h period, but they moved more often at night and less often in other periods than would occur by chance, and they moved more often on ebbing and flooding tides and less often at slack periods. Fish with pressure-sensitive transmitters were almost always (97.3% of records) within 2.5 m of the surface and 76.8% between 1 – 2 m, despite deeper and shallower waters nearby where they could have been detected. The data provide new insights into the behavior of this species, whose marine ecology has not been extensively studied, and differs markedly from the region’s other native salmonids.
ISSN:0378-1909
1573-5133
DOI:10.1007/s10641-024-01533-2