2021
DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.3498
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Nonlinear survival of imperiled fish informs managed flows in a highly modified river

Abstract: Water is a fundamental resource in freshwater ecosystems, and streamflow plays a pivotal role in driving riverine ecology and biodiversity. Ecologically functional flows, managed hydrographs that are meant to reproduce the primary components of the natural hydrograph, are touted as a potential way forward to restore ecological functions of highly modified rivers, while also balancing human water needs. A major challenge in implementing functional flows will be establishing the shape of the managed hydrograph s… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…Flow management is often used as a primary tool for mitigating impacts to fish. When high flows are not available, maintaining functional flows through flow pulses offers managers another way to improve survival under low‐flow conditions (Michel et al 2021). Figure 8B describes how the slope of the intra‐annual reach flow–survival relationship changes with mean annual flow.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Flow management is often used as a primary tool for mitigating impacts to fish. When high flows are not available, maintaining functional flows through flow pulses offers managers another way to improve survival under low‐flow conditions (Michel et al 2021). Figure 8B describes how the slope of the intra‐annual reach flow–survival relationship changes with mean annual flow.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Historically, precipitation may have determined habitat capacity via the inundation of massive floodplains and wetlands. At present, precipitation may be important in overriding the effects of water regulation and extraction on the flow regime to determine whether flow within the simplified, channelized watershed does not drop below harmful thresholds as juveniles migrate to sea during the wet season (Michel et al, 2021; Munsch et al, 2020; Figure 2).…”
Section: Complexities Of Historical Reconstructionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We inferred from these patterns that constraints of spring-summer temperature on fishery performance increased over time and that the impact of dams on the salmon and habitat portfolio was a major contributor to this transition, among other contributing stressors (e.g., wetland destruction, nonnative predators). Considering that contemporary flow requirements for salmon are evident from many previous studies (e.g., Michel, 2019;Michel et al, 2021;Munsch et al, 2020), the generally positive (albeit weaker) relationships between fishery performance and precipitation in the contemporary era (Figure 8), and recognizing that we employed a correlative analysis that evaluates model performance and parsimony, we interpreted the rise of temperature constraints as reducing the fishery's climate resilience by adding to --rather than replacing --the constraints of precipitation.…”
Section: Empiri C Al E Viden Ce That Climate Con S Tr Aints On the Fi...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The concept of implementing functional flows (Yarnell et al, 2020) aims to create more seasonally inundated shallow-water habitats and allow for pulse flows to mimic the recession of the historical spring hydrograph. This could provide salmon with a last chance to transit the river and Delta before waters become exceedingly warm (Michel et al, 2021). Reduction of SAV either through removal or hydraulic modifications could reduce the predation risk posed by Largemouth Bass along the salmon outmigration corridor (Conrad et al, 2016).…”
Section: Ta B L Ementioning
confidence: 99%