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<br /> <br />OBSERVATIONS ON RECRUITMENT AND ECOLOGY OF <br />RAZORBACK SUCKER: LOWER COLORADO RIVER, <br />ARIZONA-CALIFORNIA-NEVADA <br />Paul C. Marsh' and W. L. Minckley2 <br />WC d <br />ABSTRACT.-The Colorado River system downstream from Lake Mohave yielded 42 adult, 19 juvenile, and 39 larval <br />wild razorback suckers (Xyrauchen texanus) between 1962 and 1988. Forty-six additional young captured between <br />1984 and 1987 may have been wild or stocked, hatchery-propagated fish. Wild juveniles of this endemic, imperiled <br />species, with one exception, have not been otherwise known from the Colorado River basin downstream from the <br />Grand Canyon since the 1950s. A majority of adults and larvae were from the river or its mainstream impoundments, <br />while all but one wild juvenile and all presumably stocked fish were captured from irrigation canals. The ecology of <br />artificial canals in which young razorback suckers survive and grow is poorly understood. <br />The razorback sucker, Xyrauchen texanus <br />(Abbott), a once abundant endemic fish of the <br />Colorado River basin of western North Amer- <br />ica, now occurs naturally in only a few places. <br />Populations upstream from the Grand Can- <br />yon are small in size and apparently declining <br />(McAda and Wydoski 1980, Tyus 1987, Lani- <br />gan and Tyus, in press). Downstream, a sub- <br />stantial remnant population persists only <br />above Davis Dam in Lake Mohave, Arizona- <br />Nevada (Fig. 1, Minckley 1983). That stock is <br />comprised of old individuals (McCarthy and <br />Minckley 1987), which despite annual repro- <br />duction have apparently failed to recruit for <br />nearly four decades. <br />In the 1950s, and before, razorback suckers <br />commonly occurred as a reproductive popula- <br />tion in the Colorado River downstream from <br />Davis Dam, in Lake Havasu, and below <br />(Jonez et al. 1951, Douglas 1952, Jonez and <br />Sumner 1954, Minckley 1983). They are <br />presently rare or sporadic in those river <br />reaches (Minckley 1979, Loudermilk and Ul- <br />mer 1985, Marsh and Minckley 1987); only a <br />small number of adults and a few young fish <br />have been taken in recent years (in part, <br />Minckley 1983, Ulmer and Anderson 1985). <br />Programs to reintroduce the razorback suck- <br />ers into historic habitats have been initiated <br />by the states of Arizona and California (John- <br />son 1985, Ulmer and Anderson 1985). Sub- <br />stantial stockings of hatchery-produced fish <br />into the lower Colorado River mainstream <br />were commenced in spring 1986, although a <br />few experimental reintroductions were made <br />earlier. <br />Occurrences of larvae or juveniles collected <br />before the times of reintroductions, or in <br />places inaccessible to stocked fish, represent <br />natural production in the system. The intent <br />of this paper is to separate records of natural <br />occurrences from those attributable to hatch- <br />ery fish. We document historic collections of <br />small-sized razorback suckers downstream <br />from Davis Dam, which, in light of recent <br />age-and-growth and larval studies (McCarthy <br />and Minckley 1987, Marsh and Papoulias, in <br />press), provide evidence of recruitment to the <br />population. We then report probable or <br />known occurrences of reintroduced fish in <br />the system; Langhorst (1988) further details <br />short-term recaptures of hatchery-produced <br />fish recently stocked by California. Com- <br />parisons of collection localities for juveniles <br />before and following reintroduction efforts <br />indicate that both wild and hatchery-propa- <br />gated young of the species distribute them- <br />selves in similar ways, providing information <br />pertinent to both the recovery program and <br />the ecology of razorback suckers. <br />Acronyms used in the text for various agen- <br />cies are as follows: AZGFD, Arizona Game <br />and Fish Department; ASU, Arizona State <br />University; CADFG, California Department <br />of Fish and Game; NVDOW, Nevada Depart- <br />ment of Wildlife; USBR, U.S. Bureau of <br />Reclamation; and USFWS, U. S. Fish and <br />Wildlife Service. Funding for this work was <br />'Center for Environmental Studies, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1201. <br />2Departmen t of Zoology, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1501. <br />71