Use of Cover for Concealment Behavior by Rainbow Trout: Influences of Cover Structure and Area
2016
AbstractConcealment behavior by stream salmonids can benefit individuals and populations, but the availability of concealment habitat may be limited in many streams. Quantification of concealment habitat is likely to be a valuable process in the management of stream salmonids; it is a necessary step in the application of spatially explicit, individual-based models that incorporate concealment behavior. We conducted a series of laboratory experiments with Rainbow Trout Oncorhynchus mykiss to aid in the identification and quantification of concealment habitat. Overall, individual Rainbow Trout about 12 cm FL readily used low-ceiling spaces with one, two, or four openings for concealment. Structures analogous to weakly undercut banks were used less. Mean use of different cover types was less variable in an experiment in which groups of three fish were tested. Individuals in groups rarely shared cover spaces, even though in another experiment individual fish readily occupied spaces less than 25% of the area o...
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