Using thermal limits to assess establishment of fish dispersing to high-latitude and high-elevation watersheds

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Abstract

Distributional shifts of biota to higher latitudes and elevations are presumably influenced by species-specific physiological tolerances related to warming temperatures. However, it is establishment rather than dispersal that may be limiting colonizations in these cold frontier areas. In freshwater ecosystems, perennial groundwater springs provide critical winter thermal refugia in these extreme environments. By reconciling the thermal characteristics of these refugia with theminimumthermal tolerances of life stages critical for establishment, we develop a strategy to focus broad projections of northward and upward range shifts to the specific habitats that are likely for establishments. We evaluate this strategy using chum salmon (Oncorhynchus keta) and pink salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha) that seem poised to colonize Arctic watersheds. Stream habitats with aminimum temperature of 4 °C during spawning and temperatures above 2 °C during egg incubation were most vulnerable to establishments bychumand pink salmon. This strategy will improve modelling forecasts of range shifts for cold freshwater habitats and focus proactive efforts to conserve both newly emerging fisheries and native species at northern and upper distributional extremes.

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Dunmall, K. M., Mochnacz, N. J., Zimmerman, C. E., Lean, C., & Reist, J. D. (2016). Using thermal limits to assess establishment of fish dispersing to high-latitude and high-elevation watersheds. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 73(12), 1750–1758. https://doi.org/10.1139/cjfas-2016-0051

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