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Conservation of Freshwater Thermal Habitats for Pacific Salmon in a Changing Climate
註釋Climate adaptation strategies for freshwater biota have focused on how water temperature and hydrology will change over time, but understanding spatial patterns in water temperature will also be essential for evaluating vulnerability of biota to future climate and for identifying and protecting diverse thermal habitats. I used high-resolution remotely sensed water temperature data for over 16,000 km of 2nd to 7th-order rivers throughout the Pacific Northwest and California to evaluate spatial patterns of summertime water temperature at multiple spatial scales. I found a diverse and geographically distributed suite of whole-river patterns. About half of rivers warmed asymptotically in a downstream direction, as expected, whereas the rest exhibited complex and unique spatial patterns. Patterns were associated with both broad-scale hydroclimatic variables as well as characteristics unique to each basin. Within-river thermal heterogeneity patterns were highly river-specific, but median size and spacing of cool patches