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Missing collaborator.

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Presentation on theme: "Missing collaborator."— Presentation transcript:

1 Missing collaborator

2 Conceptual Overview SHIRAZ Landscape Land Use Processes
Land use & landscape processes affect habitat Freshwater Habitat Freshwater habitat affects productivity & capacity SHIRAZ Biological Response

3 The SHIRAZ model Developed for Muckelshoot Tribe in WA to evaluate ESA recovery planning for salmon Uses flexible life history, with reach by reach specification of habitat characteristics Basic structure can be simplified and adapted to meet various needs (i.e. it’s a framework) Built with Visual Basic & integrates with Excel

4 Alternative life histories
Spawners Adults Spawners Eggs Fry First winter residents Smolts Ocean residents Adults

5 Relate life history to habitat
Stage 1 Habitat Stage 2 Habitat Stage 3

6 Multistage Beverton-Holt Model
(Mousalli & Hilborn 1986) Ns ≡ individuals alive at stage s p ≡ max. survival rate from s  s+1 ≡ “productivity” c ≡ max. N producible at s+1 ≡ “capacity”

7 Key Attributes In general
Freshwater survival driven by relationships between habitat, p, & c c determined by quantity of habitat p determined by quality of habitat Also assume Freshwater survival is density-dependent Marine survival is density-independent

8 Habitat Variables Inherent “hard-wired” Generic spawning area
rearing area % fines % impervious Generic Increase or decrease c & p around a “reference” level Multiplier specified by a general quadratic relationship Based on difference between present state and reference Multiplier = exp[f1(state – ref) + f2(state – ref)2]

9 Example of Habitat Relationship

10 Changing habitat variables
1) Underlying trend (i.e. annual increase or decrease) Hmax trend>0 trend<0 2) Intervention (i.e. bulk addition or removal) Hmax (+) (-) Time

11 Other model features Hatchery influence Harvest strategies
Ocean survival

12 Integration with PRISM
Land Use Landscape Processes PRISM Freshwater Habitat SHIRAZ Biological Response

13 Linking landscape to life history
Stage 1 Climate FW Habitat Stage 2 Ocean Habitat Hydrology Stage 3 Land use Landscape Processes

14 Current status Programming interactive improvements
Researching habitat-fish relationships Researching hydrology-habitat relationships

15 Moving Forward Choose watershed (Snohomish or Puyallip/White?)
Add variable hydrology inputs Allow for various “what if” scenarios

16 Example scenario ? Fry survival Ambient Decrease Increase % fines
Stream flow % fines Precipitation Stream flow

17 Ocean regime shifts Evaluation of alternative harvest strategies should be robust to uncertainty about future ocean changes May want to include known ocean changes based on historical data

18 SHIRAZ Summary It’s a modeling framework Uses flexible life history
Spatially explicit habitat characteristics Basic structure can be simplified and adapted


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