Radio-tracking: a useful tool for the Aulne Atlantic salmon rehabilita- tion program

A two-year radio-tracking study of Atlantic salmon was conducted on the Aulne, a small French coastal river. The behaviour of 129 salmon was studied from early July 1999 to mid-December 2000. The objective was to inves-tigate patterns of upstream migration of salmon, in particular through the lower...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: O. Croze
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.560.3274
http://oa.imft.fr/2282/1/Croze_2005_coispa.pdf
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Summary:A two-year radio-tracking study of Atlantic salmon was conducted on the Aulne, a small French coastal river. The behaviour of 129 salmon was studied from early July 1999 to mid-December 2000. The objective was to inves-tigate patterns of upstream migration of salmon, in particular through the lower 70 kilometres of the river which is canalised. This enabled us to compare the passability of weirs and how this varied according to the type of fish-pass facility. The technique of the cumulative effect of the obstacles indicates that less than 5 percent of the po-pulation is likely to get through the canalised part and reach areas that are suitable for spawning. The most seri-ous obstacles were presented by the weirs located the furthest downstream and two others in the middle of the river. The study also enabled both an estimation of the impact of fishing activities and a comparison of the upstream migration capacities of wild and reared salmon. Radio-tracking thus provides managers with a tool for assessing the restoration plan in order to improve its efficiency.