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UCREFRP
UCREFRP Catalog Number
7229
Author
Kaeding, L. R. and M. A. Zimmerman
Title
Life History and Ecology of the Humpback Chub in the Little Colorado and Colorado Rivers of the Grand Canyon
USFW Year
1983
USFW - Doc Type
Transactions of the American Fisheries Society
Copyright Material
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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 />
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