97th ESA Annual Meeting (August 5 -- 10, 2012)

PS 87-2 - The strength of Nocomis nest association contributes to patterns of rarity and commonness among New River, Virginia cyprinids

Friday, August 10, 2012
Exhibit Hall, Oregon Convention Center
Brandon K. Peoples, Fish and Wildlife Conservation, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA
Background/Question/Methods

Many North American minnows (Cyprinidae) exhibit nest association, a spawning mode in which one species (associate) uses nests constructed by another species (host). Although this relationship may be obligate for some species, many nest associates can use alternative reproductive modes, indicating that the strength of the relationship between associate and host may vary. Quantifying the strength of the nest association relationship is a necessary first step for understanding the importance of this interaction to stream fish communities. We conducted a literature review of ecological and ethological reproductive traits for 11 nest associates of Nocomis occurring in the New River basin, Virginia. We used phylogenetic eigenvector regression (PVR) to remove the effects of phylogenetic relatedness among species, and used nonmetric multidimensional scaling (NMS) to ordinate a phylogenetically independent trait similarity matrix of the 11 species.

Results/Conclusions

Based on the ordination results, we delineated a group of strong and weak nest associates. Strong nest associates showed significant geographic range overlap with Nocomis, while weak ones did not. No difference in spawning temperature range overlap was observed between the two groups. We then tested for effects of nest association strength on species’ rarity, and found that most (6 of 7) strong nest associates were classified as rare based on geographic extent, habitat breadth, or local abundance. Conversely, all weak nest associates were classified as common.  These results indicate that nest association strength is related to rarity; a potentially crucial aspect of conservation that has been previously overlooked.