
Conserving biological resources native to large river systems increasingly depends on how flow-regulated segments of these rivers are managed. Improving management will require a better understanding of linkages between river biota and temporal variability of flow and instream habitat. However, few studies have quantified responses of native fish populations to multiyear (>2 yr) patterns of hydrologic or habitat variability in flow-regulated systems. To provide these data, we quantified young-of-year (YOY) fish abundance during four years in relation to hydrologic and habitat variability in two segments of the Tallapoosa River in the southeastern United States. One segment had an unregulated flow regime, whereas the other was flow-regulated by a peak-load generating hydropower dam. We sampled fishes annually and explored how continuously recorded flow data and physical habitat simulation models (PHABSIM) for spring (April–June) and summer (July–August) preceding each sample explained fish abundances. Patt...
PHABSIM, releases, physical habitat, rainfall, habitat, spawning, reproduction, models, juvenile, fish population, Hydropower
PHABSIM, releases, physical habitat, rainfall, habitat, spawning, reproduction, models, juvenile, fish population, Hydropower
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