Abstract Although the importance of water temperature to the ecology of stream fishes is well documented, relatively little information is available on the extent of regional variation in thermal regime and its influence on stream fish distribution and abundance patterns. In streams draining the heterogeneous glacial landscape of Michigan's Lower Peninsula, regional variation in summer mean temperature and temperature fluctuation is among the highest reported in the literature. We developed a habitat classification to simplify the description of thermal regimes and to describe the relationships between available thermal regimes and distribution patterns of stream fishes. Changes in community composition, species richness, and standing stocks of key fish species occurred across gradients in mean temperature and temperature fluctuation. These changes were used to identify three mean temperature categories (cold, <19°C; cool, 19–<22°C; and warm, ≥22°C) and three temperature fluctuation categories (stable, <5...
CITATION STYLE
Wehrly, K. E., Wiley, M. J., & Seelbach, P. W. (2003). Classifying Regional Variation in Thermal Regime Based on Stream Fish Community Patterns. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society, 132(1), 18–38. https://doi.org/10.1577/1548-8659(2003)132<0018:crvitr>2.0.co;2
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