Multispecies Occupancy Modeling as a Tool for Evaluating the Status and Distribution of Darters in the Elk River, Tennessee

2016 
AbstractSixteen darter species, including the federally endangered Boulder Darter Etheostoma wapiti, are known to occur in the Elk River, a large, flow-regulated tributary of the Tennessee River, Tennessee–Alabama. Since the construction of Tims Ford Dam (TFD) in 1970, habitat modification caused by cold, hypolimnetic water releases and peak-demand hydropower generation has contributed to population declines and range reductions for numerous aquatic species in the main-stem Elk River. We developed Bayesian hierarchical multispecies occupancy models to determine the influence of site- and species-level characteristics on darter occurrence by using presence–absence data for 15 species collected from 39 study sites. Modeling results indicated that large-river obligate species, such as the Boulder Darter, were 6.92 times more likely to occur for every 37-km increase in the distance downstream from TFD. In contrast, small-stream species were 2.35 times less likely and cosmopolitan species were 1.88 times less ...
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