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PNW Funded Projects
2001
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PNW Project Overview 1999

Effect of Marine Derived Nutrients on Insect Production in Salmon Spawning Streams 

Principal Investigators:  
Dr. Robert Gara, University of Washington, College of Forest Resource
Jon Honea, University of Washington, College of Forest Resources, PhD Candidate

Awarded: $2,200

Project Description:
The decline of Pacific Northwest anadromous salmonids has resulted in the listing of some stocks as threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act.  The socio-economic stability of the affected regions depends on the ability of land managers and regulators to successfully direct land use practices in a manner consistent with the survival and recovery needs of the listed salmonids.  This is only possible with a specific understanding of the species and its ecology.  A fundamental component of a species’ ecology is its trophic linkages with other organisms.  A primary trophic interaction of anadromous salmonids appears to involve the release of marine-derived nutrients (MDN) from spawning adults and later from their spawned-out carcasses.  Other research has found that many types of organisms inhabiting or visiting streams and riparian areas utilize MDN.  This MDN fertilization, repeated with each spawning, benefits juvenile salmonids that may remain in streams for up to three years after hatching, depending on species.  Aquatic life stages of macroinvertebrates probably play an important role in the transfer of MDN from adult to juvenile salmonids.  To discover how macroinvertebrates facilitate the transfer of MDN from adult to juvenile salmonids, this project will quantify the pathways of MDN to macroinvertebrates by monitoring the response of aquatic macroinvertebrate production to salmon carcass decomposition.  These production estimates will provide a measure of the total energy available to higher consumers, including juvenile salmon.  In addition, the project will evaluate the relative importance of the different pathways of MDN to aquatic macroinvertebrates by monitoring changes in production in each of the major trophic categories of aquatic macroinvertebrates.  Finally, the project will determine if juvenile salmon benefit from MDN at the study sites, as has been shown elsewhere.  By characterizing the transfer of MDN via these trophic linkages, this research will not only describe the capacity of aquatic macroinvertebrates to serve as a link between adult and juvenile salmon, it will also identify parameters – such as taxa presence/absence, density, community composition, etc. – that can be monitored to evaluate the effectiveness of conservation and restoration practices.


Project Status:

Macroinvertebrate sampling began in October 1999. 
Project continued with 2000 funds.

 

 

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