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2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Ecological Analysis of Structure and Function Goals of Ecological Analysis 1. Evaluate biological structures, functions, and interactions at three scales (individual, population, and community) 2. Characterize abiotic-biotic linkages relevant to each scale Ecological indicator- a metric used to diagnose the status of a system. -Can be a biological, chemical, or physical metric Ecological functions- the ways in which organisms interact with each other and the environment around them. p. 4-1 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS 2D Modeling and Ecological Functions What discharge accesses streamwood in a mountain river? p. 4-2 ©2012 Pasternack & Wheaton 1 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Physical Habitat • Location with measurable, characteristic attributes where organisms perform a designated ecological function. • Attributes stem from interaction among hydrology, hydraulics, and geomorphology • Depth, velocity, substrate, temperature, cover are the most common attributes used. • Microhabitat- point-scale locations • Mesohabitat- patches at the 0.1-10 channel-width scale p. 4-3 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS What Physical Habitats Do You See Here? p. 4-4 ©2012 Pasternack & Wheaton 2 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Physical Habitat Performance Indicators • [Species X lifestage #] use most, but not all, of their suitable microhabitat. • Sufficient quality, number, size and distribution of mesohabitats, and migration corridors between mesohabitats, exist for [Species X lifestage #] to achieve designated ecological functions. • Sufficient maintenance of watershed processes and regulatory management practices to create and maintain suitable physical habitat for all freshwater lifestages of relevant species. p. 4-5 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Steps to Characterize Physical Habitat 1. Make biological observations 2. Determine/quantify habitat suitability needs 3. Map habitat using 2D model results 4. Bioverify results 5. Analyze habitat statistics and spatial structure p. 4-6 ©2012 Pasternack & Wheaton 3 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Biological Observations • Sampling or census approach • Measure submeter geographic locations • Measure attributes at locations Yellow dots are observations p. 4-7 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Habitat Suitability Curve (HSC) • Graphical representation of suitability of physical condition • Simple HSC: scale statistical distribution to 0-1 range p. 4-8 ©2012 Pasternack & Wheaton 4 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Hydraulic Habitat Suitability Index (HHSI) depth field velocity field Habitat Quality Class Best Quality Good Quality Low Quality Very Poor Quality Non Habitat HHSI field p. 4-9 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Example HHSI Maps For Different Flows p. 4-10 ©2012 Pasternack & Wheaton 5 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Bioverification Concept • “Bioverification” is a test of the combined predictions that results from coupling 2D model results with HSCs. • A bioverified model yields reasonable predictions of habitat availability, which may then be used in spatial and statistical analyses, such as assessment of habitat areas as a function of discharge. • Bioverification is achieved with a test of the Electivity Index. p. 4-11 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Electivity Index (EI) Definition Utilization-to-Available Ratio by habitat quality class %U i 100 % Ai 100 #reddsi total #redds bed areai total area Example EI EI > 1 indicates preference of habitat class I EI< 1 indicates tolerance of habitat class i EI = 0 indicates no habitat of habitat class i ©2012 Pasternack & Wheaton %U i % Ai Habitat blue green yellow red white # Stars % stars % area EI 18 72 35 2.06 4 16 15 1.07 2 8 20 0.40 1 4 15 0.27 0 0 15 0.00 p. 4-12 6 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Bioverification Performance Indicator 1 • A pairing of a 2D model with HSCs must yield one or more habitat classes with EI>1 and one or more with EI<1. This indicates that it is predicting both preference and tolerance. • Must take a risk to have specificity! Trivial Prediction! Risky Prediction! p. 4-13 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Bioverification Performance Indicator 2 • Habitat classes with EI>1 must be those with high habitat index values and habitat classes with EI<1 must be those with low habitat index values. Violates HSC Consistent with HSC p. 4-14 ©2012 Pasternack & Wheaton 7 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Example of Bioverification LYR Chinook salmon spawning 830 cfs island High flow Medium Low = redd Very Poor Non-habitat p. 4-15 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Bioverification Tests Yuba 2004 60 • 2 bins with EI>1 • 3 bins with EI<1 Redds Habitat 50 % Occurrence preferred 40 tolerated avoided preferred 30 tolerated avoided tolerated avoided 20 10 • Lowest bins have lowest EIs • Highest bins have highest EIs 0 0 0-0.2 0.2-0.4 0.4-0.6 0.6-1.0 Habitat Quality ©2012 Pasternack & Wheaton p. 4-16 8 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Weighted Usable Area (WUA) Curve • • • • At cell i: WUAi = HSIi x Pixel Area WUA = ∑ WUAi Calculate WUA for each discharge (Q) Plot WUA vs Q p. 4-17 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS % of area Habitat Quality Bins By Discharge HHSI Bins ©2012 Pasternack & Wheaton p. 4-18 9 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS EI Use For Any Polygonal Object • Microhabitat analysis uses habitat quality bins. • Can also use EI to test biological occurrence in – – – – – – – Segment-scale inundation zones Reaches Morphological units (overall and by MU size) Mesohabitat patch size Scour/deposition patches Distance bands Longitudinal rectangles (from box-counting method) p. 4-19 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Morphological Unit EI Analysis p. 4-20 ©2012 Pasternack & Wheaton 10 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Chinook Spawning Preference For MU Size (100’x650’) (100’x250’) (100’x450’) (100’x100’) Strongest Pref Small RTs Medium Riffles Large Runs p. 4-21 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Mesohabitat Patch Size Preference (100’x500’) Chinook spawning (320’x500’) p. 4-22 ©2012 Pasternack & Wheaton 11 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Nonrandom Longitudinal Distribution Redd occurrence is skewed upstream p. 4-23 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Do redds repeatedly prefer and avoid the same 400’ sections from year to year? % of 2009-2010 redds at location xi 7 6 y = 0.9389x + 0.0222 R² = 0.83613 5 4 3 2 1 0 0 ©2012 Pasternack & Wheaton 1 2 3 4 % of 2010-2011 redds at location xi 5 6 p. 4-24 12 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Physical Habitat Prediction for River Rehabilitation D1 D2 D3 D4 D5 D6 Do high or low relief riffle-pool units yield more spawning and rearing habitat? p. 4-25 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS 2D Model Predictions of Habitat Quality p. 4-26 ©2012 Pasternack & Wheaton 13 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Areas of Habitat Quality Bins Compared p. 4-27 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Gravel Addition Efficiency Metrics p. 4-28 ©2012 Pasternack & Wheaton 14 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS Summary of Design Performance Metrics Low-relief riffle-pool units work best p. 4-29 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS BIOENERGETICS MODEL: Consumption = Growth + Respiration + Egestion + Excretion Field Measurements Function of Temperature Determined from laboratory studies • Isolates consumption on growth… From Nick Bouwes & Eric Wall Foraging Model from Hayes et al. (2000) ©2012 Pasternack & Wheaton 15 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS NET RATE OF ENEGY INTAKE – Bioenergetics • 2D Hydraulic Model • Foraging Model (Hayes) • Drift Model • Bioenergetics Model • Combine to look at NREI From Nick Bouwes & Eric Wall 2D PHYSICAL HABITAT ANALYSIS NET RATE OF ENEGY INTAKE – Bioenergetics What happens when you change physical habitat? From Nick Bouwes & Eric Wall ©2012 Pasternack & Wheaton 16