Predicting how environmental conditions and smolt body length when entering the marine environment impact individual Atlantic salmon Salmo salar adult return rates.

Populations of Atlantic salmon Salmo salar have experienced precipitous declines in abundance since the 1970s. This decline has been associated with reduced numbers of adult salmon returning to freshwater from their marine migration, i.e., their marine return rates (MRR). Thus, understanding the fac...

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Main Authors: Simmons, O.M., Britton, J. R., Gillingham, P.K., Nevoux, M., Riley, W. D., Rivot, E., Gregory, S.D.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/36275/
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/36275/7/jfb.14946.pdf
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spelling ftunivbournem:oai:eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk:36275 2023-06-11T04:10:17+02:00 Predicting how environmental conditions and smolt body length when entering the marine environment impact individual Atlantic salmon Salmo salar adult return rates. Simmons, O.M. Britton, J. R. Gillingham, P.K. Nevoux, M. Riley, W. D. Rivot, E. Gregory, S.D. 2022-08-16 application/pdf http://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/36275/ https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/36275/7/jfb.14946.pdf en eng https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/36275/7/jfb.14946.pdf Simmons, O.M., Britton, J. R., Gillingham, P.K., Nevoux, M., Riley, W. D., Rivot, E. and Gregory, S.D., 2022. Predicting how environmental conditions and smolt body length when entering the marine environment impact individual Atlantic salmon Salmo salar adult return rates. Journal of Fish Biology, 101 (2), 378-388. cc_by_nc_4 Article PeerReviewed 2022 ftunivbournem 2023-05-28T05:45:41Z Populations of Atlantic salmon Salmo salar have experienced precipitous declines in abundance since the 1970s. This decline has been associated with reduced numbers of adult salmon returning to freshwater from their marine migration, i.e., their marine return rates (MRR). Thus, understanding the factors that affect MRR is of crucial conservation importance. We used a state-space model with a 13-year time series of individually tagged salmon mark-recapture histories on the River Frome, southern England, to test the effect of smolt body length on their MRR. As well as smolt length, the model tested for the influence of environmental covariates that were representative of the conditions experienced by the smolts in the early stages of their seaward migration, i.e., from the lower river to the estuary exit. The model indicated that, even when accounting for environmental covariates, smolt body length was an important predictor of MRR. While larger smolts have a higher probability of returning to their natal river as adults than smaller smolts, and one-sea-winter salmon have a survival rate twice as high as multi-sea-winter salmon, the actual biological mechanisms underpinning this phenomenon remain uncertain. These results have important applications for salmon conservation, as efforts to bolster salmon populations in the freshwater environment should consider ways to improve smolt quality (i.e., body size) as well as smolt quantity. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. Article in Journal/Newspaper Atlantic salmon Salmo salar Bournemouth University Research Online (BURO)
institution Open Polar
collection Bournemouth University Research Online (BURO)
op_collection_id ftunivbournem
language English
description Populations of Atlantic salmon Salmo salar have experienced precipitous declines in abundance since the 1970s. This decline has been associated with reduced numbers of adult salmon returning to freshwater from their marine migration, i.e., their marine return rates (MRR). Thus, understanding the factors that affect MRR is of crucial conservation importance. We used a state-space model with a 13-year time series of individually tagged salmon mark-recapture histories on the River Frome, southern England, to test the effect of smolt body length on their MRR. As well as smolt length, the model tested for the influence of environmental covariates that were representative of the conditions experienced by the smolts in the early stages of their seaward migration, i.e., from the lower river to the estuary exit. The model indicated that, even when accounting for environmental covariates, smolt body length was an important predictor of MRR. While larger smolts have a higher probability of returning to their natal river as adults than smaller smolts, and one-sea-winter salmon have a survival rate twice as high as multi-sea-winter salmon, the actual biological mechanisms underpinning this phenomenon remain uncertain. These results have important applications for salmon conservation, as efforts to bolster salmon populations in the freshwater environment should consider ways to improve smolt quality (i.e., body size) as well as smolt quantity. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Simmons, O.M.
Britton, J. R.
Gillingham, P.K.
Nevoux, M.
Riley, W. D.
Rivot, E.
Gregory, S.D.
spellingShingle Simmons, O.M.
Britton, J. R.
Gillingham, P.K.
Nevoux, M.
Riley, W. D.
Rivot, E.
Gregory, S.D.
Predicting how environmental conditions and smolt body length when entering the marine environment impact individual Atlantic salmon Salmo salar adult return rates.
author_facet Simmons, O.M.
Britton, J. R.
Gillingham, P.K.
Nevoux, M.
Riley, W. D.
Rivot, E.
Gregory, S.D.
author_sort Simmons, O.M.
title Predicting how environmental conditions and smolt body length when entering the marine environment impact individual Atlantic salmon Salmo salar adult return rates.
title_short Predicting how environmental conditions and smolt body length when entering the marine environment impact individual Atlantic salmon Salmo salar adult return rates.
title_full Predicting how environmental conditions and smolt body length when entering the marine environment impact individual Atlantic salmon Salmo salar adult return rates.
title_fullStr Predicting how environmental conditions and smolt body length when entering the marine environment impact individual Atlantic salmon Salmo salar adult return rates.
title_full_unstemmed Predicting how environmental conditions and smolt body length when entering the marine environment impact individual Atlantic salmon Salmo salar adult return rates.
title_sort predicting how environmental conditions and smolt body length when entering the marine environment impact individual atlantic salmon salmo salar adult return rates.
publishDate 2022
url http://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/36275/
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/36275/7/jfb.14946.pdf
genre Atlantic salmon
Salmo salar
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
Salmo salar
op_relation https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/36275/7/jfb.14946.pdf
Simmons, O.M., Britton, J. R., Gillingham, P.K., Nevoux, M., Riley, W. D., Rivot, E. and Gregory, S.D., 2022. Predicting how environmental conditions and smolt body length when entering the marine environment impact individual Atlantic salmon Salmo salar adult return rates. Journal of Fish Biology, 101 (2), 378-388.
op_rights cc_by_nc_4
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