Reproductive ecology of hatchery-origin pallid sturgeon upstream of Fort Peck Reservoir, Montana
Date
2020
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Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Letters & Science
Abstract
Conservation propagation of pallid sturgeon above Fort Peck Reservoir has successfully recruited a new generation of spawning-capable pallid sturgeon to a location that would otherwise have fewer than 30 remaining. Successful recovery of pallid sturgeon will now rely on spawning in locations that provide adequate drift distance for larvae to recruit. Prior to this study, all reproductively-active female pallid sturgeon underwent ovarian follicular atresia. The reasons for and prevalence of ovarian follicular atresia were unclear, spawning periodicity of females remained undescribed, and remaining prepubescent fish indicated that age- and size-at-first maturity would vary more than currently described. Furthermore, spawning location, spawning-related interactions among conspecifics, and substrate composition at spawning locations remained undescribed. We used data on reproductive status and location to describe age- and size-at-first maturity, the prevalence of ovarian follicular atresia during first gametogenic cycles, spawning periodicity for female and male pallid sturgeon, where spawning occurs, if spawning locations are related to discharge, if substrate characteristics at the spawning locations were similar to other river reaches, and if female, male, and atretic female pallid sturgeon use the river similarly. Pallid sturgeon matured at older ages and larger sizes than described for other populations with females maturing at 18 years old and males at 15; however, prepubescent pallid sturgeon as old as 20 were documented. During the presumed-first gametogenic cycle, 62.5% of female pallid sturgeon underwent follicular atresia. Females had biennial reproductive cycles, and males had annual and biennial reproductive cycles. Reproductively-active male and female pallid sturgeon were found in similar locations, while locations of atretic female pallid sturgeon varied. The furthest upstream locations of pallid sturgeon including locations in the Marias River occurred during 2018 when discharge was at an unprecedented high. Spawning occurred in locations less than 131 km from the river-reservoir transition zone, which does not provide adequate drift-distance for larvae. Altering discharge and water temperature at Tiber Dam to mimic observed values in 2018 may increase use of the Marias River by pallid sturgeon during spawning, which would provide adequate drift distance to larvae.