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~~p p. ~, <br />;~,~." ~ G ~G~y'nw~ <br />1a~3 '~~ <br />Trmuarlions of fhe American Fisheries Sociel~• 112:547-594, 1983 <br />Life History and Ecology of the Humpback Chub in the <br />Little Colorado and Colorado Rivers of the <br />Grand Canyon ,~ <br />LYNN R. KAEDINGI AND MARIAN A. ZIMMERMAN2 <br />United States Fish and Wildlife Service, Colorado River Fishery Project <br />Flagsta~ Arizona <br />Abstract <br />Humpback chubs Gila cyj~ha in the Little Colorado River, a warm saline tributary to the <br />Colorado River, grew rapidly to about 250-300 mm total length at 3 years of age, the onset of <br />reproductive maturity for female fish. Fish spawned in April or May; annual reproductive success <br />was greatest when spawning coincided with seasonal river runoff. Meristic characters of hump- <br />back chubs from the upper 8 km of the river differed from those offish from the adjacent lower <br />5-km river reach, and suggested that some genes of bonytail Gila elegans may occur in the latter <br />population. Use of the physical habitat by age-0 and juvenile humpback chubs was affected by "' <br />light intensity; shallow littoral areas were used during darkness, but during daylight only when <br />the water was turbid. No evidence of humpback chub reproduction was found in the Colorado <br />I?;iver part of the study area; small humpback chubs collected there resulted from spawning in <br />the Little Colorado River. Year-round low temperatures in the Colorado River (the tailwater of <br />Glen Canyon Dam) did not inhibit seasonal gonadal maturation of humpback chubs; however, <br />laboratory studies have indicated that such low temperatures result in nearly complete mortality <br />of embryonic and larval humpback chubs. The recapture of tagged fish, seasonal changes in <br />rates of capture of adults from the Little Colorado River, and the distribution of adult humpback <br />chubs in the Colorado River near its confluence with the Little Colorado River supported the <br />hypothesis that some adult fish from the Colorado River enter the Little Colorado River to <br />spawn. Stomach contents from humpback chubs were dominated numerically by immature Chiro- <br />nomidae and Simuliidae. Lernaea cyf~rinacea was the most conspicuous metazoan parasite of <br />humpback chubs in the Little Colorado River but was rarely found on fish in the Colorado River. <br />Persistence of the humpback chub in the Little Colorado River could be attributable, in part, <br />to the unsuitability of that environment, and that of the Colorado River, for potential competitor <br />or predator species in the drainage. Introduction to the Little Colorado River of such a species <br />that might prosper under the physicochemical conditions of the river could have a devastating <br />effect on the humpback chub in the Grand Ganyon. <br />Received November 24, 1982 Accepted June 1, 1983 <br />i <br />The historic fish community of the warmer <br />reaches of the Colorado and Green rivers con- <br />' Present address: United States Fish and Wildlife <br />Service, 551 25'/a Road, Grand Junction, Colorado <br />81505. <br />2 Present address: United States Fish and Wildlife <br />Service, 605 West 4th Avenue, Room G81, Anchor- <br />age, Alaska 99501. <br />D~~ <br />silted largely of endemic species, several of which <br />are now formally designated as endangered or <br />are considered rare because alteration of the <br />aquatic environment has greatly reduced their <br />number's (Miller 1961; Hinckley and Deacon <br />1968; Holden and Stalnaker 1975). The loss of <br />habitat for some native fishes of the Colorado <br />River drainage coincided with the closure of <br />Flaming Gorge Dam on the Green River (Van- <br />577 <br />