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<br />.. <br /> <br />. .I.;s IA So -j lC'o'p r q '\ 0 <br /> <br />~~-1~ <br /> <br />THE SOUTHWESTERN NATURALIST 35(4):427-433 <br /> <br />DECEMBER 1990 <br /> <br />SPAWNING AND MOVEMENTS OF RAZORBACK <br />SUCKER, XYRAUCHEN TEXANUSJ IN <br />THE GREEN RIVER BASIN OF <br />COLORADO AND UTAH <br /> <br />HAROLD M. TyUS AND CATHERINE A. KARP <br /> <br />United States Fish and Wildlife Service, <br />1680 West Highway 40, Number 1210, <br />Vernal, UT 84078 <br /> <br />ABSTRACT-Spawning and movements of the razorback sucker, Xyrauchen texanus, were evaluated <br />by radiotelemetry (n = 17 fish) and capture of 230 adults (105 recaptures) in the Green and Yampa <br />rivers, 1987 to 1989. Ripe fish (n = 194) were captured in riffles with cobble, gravel, and sand <br />substrates from mid-April to early June. Recaptured males were ripe from 2 to 28 days and recaptured <br />females from 2 to 15 days. Razorback suckers spawned during ascending and highest spring flows at <br />water temperatures of about 140C (range of 9 to 170C). Spawning migrations of 30 to 106 kIn were <br />detected in 17 razorback suckers, but movements were more limited or undetected in other individuals. <br />Flooded lowlands and lower portions of tributary streams presumably served as resting-feeding areas <br />for razorback suckers during the breeding season. Native flannelmouth sucker (Catostomus latipinnis), <br />bluehead sucker (Catostomus discobolus), and putative flannelmouth x razorback sucker hybrids in <br />breeding condition were collected with ripe razorback suckers. Razorback sucker is in peril due to a <br />paucity of spawning adults, hybridization with other suckers, little or no recruitment, and habitat <br />loss. <br /> <br />The razorback sucker, Xyrauchen texanus, is <br />one of several catostomid fishes endemic to the <br />Colorado River basin. This monotypic genus, once <br />so abundant that it was harvested as a commercial <br />food Uordan, 1891; Hubbs and Miller, 1953; <br />Miller, 1961; Minckley, 1973, 1983; Moyle, <br />1976), is now threatened with extinction (Wick <br />et aI., 1982; Minckley, 1983; Tyus, 1987). Ra- <br />zorback sucker is proposed for listing under pro- <br />visions of the Endangered Species Act of 1973 <br />and is protected by the states of Arizona, Cali- <br />fornia, Colorado, Nevada, Utah, and Wyoming <br />(United States Department ofthe Interior, 1990). <br />Natural populations of razorback suckers exist <br />only in some reservoirs in the lower Colorado <br />River (Minckley, 1983; Marsh and Minckley, <br />1989), in the upper Colorado River near Grand <br />Junction, Colorado (Wick et al., 1982), sporad- <br />ically in the lower San Juan River (M. Moretti, <br />pers. comm.), and in the Green and Yampa rivers <br />of Utah and Colorado (Vanicek et al., 1970; <br />Holden and Stalnaker, 1975a, 1975b;Tyus, 1987). <br />Although small, the last population represents the <br /> <br />largest extant riverine population of this species <br />(Tyus, 1987; Lanigan and Tyus, 1989). Razor- <br />back sucker stocks are composed of old individuals <br />and recruitment is minimal or nonexistent <br />throughout the Colorado River basin (McCarthy <br />and Minckley, 1987; Tyus, 1987; Marsh and <br />Minckley, 1989). <br />Distribution, abundance, and habitat use of <br />razorback sucker in the Green River basin has <br />been studied by various investigators (Wick et aI., <br />1982; Tyus, 1987; Lanigan and Tyus, 1989; C. <br />McAda, pers. comm.). We further describe <br />spawning, movements, and habitat use of razor- <br />back sucker relative to discharge and temperature <br />regimens and provide information about associ- <br />ated species to further recovery efforts for this <br />fish. <br /> <br />MATERIALS AND METHODs-Razorback suckers <br />were collected by electrofishing in the upper Green <br />River (km 396.8 to 552.0) on 20 April to 4 June 1987, <br />25 April to 2 June 1988, and 20 April to 7 June 1989 <br />and in the lower Yampa River (km 0 to 4) on 21 May <br />1987, 12 May to 2 June 1988, and 20 April to 30 May <br />