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<br />.,' .. <br /> <br />001620 <br /> <br />flannelmouth sucker. Even with the decline in catch rates, flannelmouth sucker remained very <br />abundant and comprised more of the total San Juan River collection than Colorado or Gunnison <br />river collections (Ryden 2000a). More-recent analysis of the catch data indicates that flannelmouth <br />sucker density river wide has not changed because the increase in Reach 6 offset the decrease in <br />the other reaches. But numbers of juvenile flannelmouth sucker declined from 1992 to 1993, and <br />they have not changed much from that time (K. Lawrence, Ecosystems Research, Inc., Personal <br />Communication). <br /> <br />Flannelmouth sucker adults are the "generalists" of the Colorado River Basin, and they are found <br />in a variety of habitats, including riffles, runs, pools, and eddies (Holden and Stalnaker 1975, <br />McAda 1977). They use cobble bars throughout the rivers for spawning and are found on the same <br />bars razorback sucker use for spawning. Larval and YOY flannelmouth sucker are found in <br />backwaters and other low-velocity habitats in early summer. Abundance of the young declines as <br />the summer progresses, likely because of mortality and a shift in habitat use to swifter main channel <br />habitats. Collections of flannelmouth sucker in the San Juan River showed the same generalized <br />habitat use (Lawrence 1999). Juveniles in the San Juan River were correlated with shoreline <br />slackwater habitats in the spring and cobble-type habitats in the autumn (Lawrence 1999). The <br />change in habitat use between juvenile and adult flannelmouth sucker was seen in their use of San <br />Juan River secondary channels (Propst and Hobbes 2000). During high flow periods, secondary <br />channels provided riffle and run habitat, and adult and larger juvenile flannelmouth sucker were <br />the most-commonly collected fish in secondary channels. Ripe fish were collected, thus suggesting <br />spawning also occurred in secondary channels. As flows receded in late summer and autumn, <br />habitats in secondary channels became primarily low-velocity types, and larger flannelmouth <br />sucker were seldom collected there. Although reduced in numbers, YOY flannelmouth sucker <br />utilized the low-velocity habitats of secondary channels during that time (Propst and Hobbes 2000). <br />Flannelmouth sucker used most available habitats, and no key habitats were identified. <br /> <br />Bluehead Sucker <br />Bluehead sucker was the third most-abundant fish in the San Juan River, and it was most abundant <br />in the upper portions of the river where cobble substrates predominated. Bluehead sucker was most <br />abundant in Reach 6, but their abundance decreased somewhat in the remainder of the river during <br />the 7-year research period (Ryden 2000a). Adult and juvenile bluehead sucker were typically <br />found in cobble substrate riffle and run habitats in the San Juan River (Ryden 2000a). Spawning <br />appeared to occur on cobble bars, similar to other native suckers. Adult and juvenile abundance <br />in the San Juan River was positively correlated with cobble-type habitats, particularly riffles <br />(Lawrence 1999). Larvae and YOY were found in low-velocity habitats in the summer, but similar <br />to flannelmouth sucker young, they tended to disappear from these habitats by late summer and <br />autumn (Archer and Crowl 2000a). Similar to flannelmouth sucker, bluehead sucker habitat use <br />was characterized by their seasonal use of secondary channels. Adults and larger juveniles used <br />secondary channels during higher-flow periods when riffle and run habitats were available, and <br />reduced numbers of young used them during low-flow periods when low-velocity habitats <br />predominated (Propst and Hobbs 2000). Key habitats for bluehead sucker were cobble substrate <br />riffles and runs. <br /> <br />September 2000 <br /> <br />3-15 <br /> <br />Program Evaluation Report <br />