Assessing contributions of cold-water refuges to reproductive migration corridor conditions for adult Chinook Salmon and steelhead trout in the Columbia River, USA
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Diadromous fish populations face multiple challenges along their migratory routes. These challenges include unfavorable water quality, harvest, and barriers to longitudinal and lateral connectivity. Interactions among factors influencing migration success make it challenging to assess management options for improving conditions for migratory fishes along riverine migration corridors. We describe a migration corridor simulation model which integrates complex individual behavior, responds to variable habitat conditions over large areas, and is able to link migration corridor conditions to fish fitness outcomes. Our model, developed within HexSim, is built around a mechanistic behavioral decision tree that drives individual interactions of fish with their spatially-explicit simulated environment. Outcomes of the migration corridor simulation model include passage time, energy use, and survival. Outcomes can be used to evaluate trade-offs of behavioral thermoregulation on fish fitness, or test alternative scenarios of refuge availability, connectivity, or barrier permeability. To demonstrate the potential utility of the simulation model, we describe the sequence of model events and basic model mechanisms. Then, we describe an application of the simulation model to a case study of salmon and steelhead adults in the Columbia River, USA, migration corridor.