Contrasting apex predator responses to experimentally reduced flow and increased temperature in a headwater stream

Year: 
2025
Publications Type: 
Journal Article
Publication Number: 
5395
Citation: 

Maffia, Madelyn; Swartz, Allison; Segura, Catalina; Warren, Dana. 2025. Contrasting apex predator responses to experimentally reduced flow and increased temperature in a headwater stream. Ecosphere. 16(6): e70293. doi:https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.70293

Abstract: 

Changing climate conditions are expected to cause increases in the frequency and severity of drought conditions in many areas around the world, including the Pacific Northwest region of North America. While drought impacts manifest across the landscape, headwater streams are particularly susceptible to droughts due to limited deep-water habitats and low water volumes that allow for substantial increases in water temperature. While low volumes of water and increased stream temperature will likely affect all aquatic species to some degree, the response of different taxa to these impacts is expected to vary with differences in physiological needs and habitat preferences among species. Using a before?after control-impact (BACI) experimental design, this study investigates how reduced streamflow and increased stream temperature affect the two dominant apex predators in headwater streams of the Pacific Northwest, coastal cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus clarkii clarkii) and coastal giant salamander (Dicamptodon tenebrosus). In a second-order stream in the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest in OR, USA, experimental flow diversions created decoupled drought conditions of reduced streamflow and elevated temperatures. Low-flow conditions were created by diverting water around a 100-m stream reach and this diverted water was passively warmed before re-entering a downstream channel to create an increased temperature reach. We compared fish and salamander abundances and stream habitat in an upstream unmanipulated reference reach to the two experimental reaches. Relative increases in temperature ranged between 0.41 and 0.63°C, reflecting realistic stream warming in this region during drought events. Trout responded positively to increased temperatures, showing an increase in abundance, biomass, condition factor, and growth, whereas salamanders responded negatively in all metrics except condition. The low-flow reach diverted approximately 50% of the flow, resulting in a relative pool area reduction of about 20%. Relative to the reference reach, salamanders displayed a net positive abundance response while trout declined in the low-flow reach. The contrasting responses of these populations to decoupled drought conditions suggest that interactions of flow and temperature changes together will influence drought responses of the vertebrate communities of headwater streams.
Keywords: BACI; climate change; drought; freshwater populations; salamanders; trout