Experiences and results with telemetry track-ing of smolts and parrs in Belgium

Abstract 1. History of the Meuse salmon project in Walloon Region A 'Meuse Salmon' project aiming at restoring an Atlantic salmon run in the River Meuse basin was put forward in 1983 (after the discovery of several 'sea trout' in the Meuse near Liège) and started officially in 19...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ovidio, Michaël
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/93023
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Summary:Abstract 1. History of the Meuse salmon project in Walloon Region A 'Meuse Salmon' project aiming at restoring an Atlantic salmon run in the River Meuse basin was put forward in 1983 (after the discovery of several 'sea trout' in the Meuse near Liège) and started officially in 1987 as a contribution of Wallonia to the European Year of Environment. In the course of this programme, most dams (3-8 m in height) obstructing the canalised River Meuse in Belgium and The Netherlands have been fitted with modern fish-ways in order to restore the free circulation of diadromous fish species. A second facet of the Salmon Meuse programme consisted in restocking salmonid streams in the Belgian Ardennes with hatchery reared salmon parr and smolt (maximum 200.000 fish per year) from foreign origins (Scotland, Ireland and France). Returning adult salmon have been scientifically recorded in the Meuse in The Netherlands (estuary and lower course) since 1994 but only since the year 2002 in Belgium: 13 (61-79 cm FL) fish in 2002 and 2 (71-76 cm FL) fish in 2003 caught mostly (13 fish) in a new big fish-pass at the Visé-Lixhe dam and (2 fish) in the River Berwinne, a small tributary of the Meuse known as the last spawning place for S. salar in Belgium in the 1920's. In 2004 returning adult salmon were not recorded in Belgian waters. Female and male returning salmon in 2002 were successfully artificially reproduced in order to build a captive freshwater brood stock to be used for production of parrs and smolts of the new Meuse strain. In 2006 a new salmon farming center will be inaugurated in Erezée (River Aisne) and will produce 200.000 juvenile Atlantic Salmon per year. 2. Monitoring of the downstream migration of smolts As the return of adult A. salmon in spawning tributaries will be permitted by the building of efficient fish passes, the success of the Meuse salmon project will mainly be influenced by the potentiality of smolts to migrate downstream. Hydroelectric power plants are frequent in the River Meuse and in its tributaries ...