Concurrent Sessions B: Case Studies of Passage at Dams - Upstream and Downstream Migration of Atlantic Salmon-Conservation of a Landlocked Population in Sweden

Populations of migratory salmon and trout have worldwide shown a decline due to human activities. Over the years numerous measures have been undertaken to maintain these populations, and conservation of migratory salmonids requires understanding of their ecology atmultiple scales, combined with asse...

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Main Authors: Bergman, Eva, Norrgård, Johnny, Hagelin, Anna, Calles, Olle, Piccolo, John, Greenberg, Larry
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst 2013
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Online Access:https://scholarworks.umass.edu/fishpassage_conference/2013/June27/65
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spelling ftunivmassamh:oai:scholarworks.umass.edu:fishpassage_conference-1488 2023-05-15T15:32:02+02:00 Concurrent Sessions B: Case Studies of Passage at Dams - Upstream and Downstream Migration of Atlantic Salmon-Conservation of a Landlocked Population in Sweden Bergman, Eva Norrgård, Johnny Hagelin, Anna Calles, Olle Piccolo, John Greenberg, Larry 2013-06-27T22:30:00Z https://scholarworks.umass.edu/fishpassage_conference/2013/June27/65 unknown ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst https://scholarworks.umass.edu/fishpassage_conference/2013/June27/65 International Conference on Engineering and Ecohydrology for Fish Passage text 2013 ftunivmassamh 2022-01-09T19:21:40Z Populations of migratory salmon and trout have worldwide shown a decline due to human activities. Over the years numerous measures have been undertaken to maintain these populations, and conservation of migratory salmonids requires understanding of their ecology atmultiple scales, combined with assessing anthropogenic impacts. The regulated River Klarälven and Lake Vänern host endemic populations of landlocked Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) and brown trout (Salmo trutta). The historically high abundances of the salmonids in the River Klarälven in the early 1800s have decreased dramatically, reaching all-time lows after the completion of all nine Swedish hydroelectric power stations in the 1960s. After an extensive stocking program and transportation of wild and hatchery-raised spawners past eight hydroelectric plants, catches from commercial, maintenance and sport fishing have again increased. Recently, increases in the proportion of wild salmon returning to the River Klarälven have generated interests in establishment of wild salmon inhabiting the entire River Klarälven, including upstream of the Norwegian border. To obtain information needed to produce a management plan for the salmon, we conducted a number of studies of upstream-migrating spawners and downstream-migrating smolts. For upstream migration, we compared migration behaviour of wild and hatchery reared salmon and found that wild fish swam directly to the spawning grounds and presumably spawned, whereas few salmon of hatchery-origin arrived at the spawning grounds, and if they did so they swam considerably more before settling down at the spawning grounds. Studies of smolt showed that only 16% of the salmon passed all eight dams, and that losses in the dam-free lower 25 km of the river, before the salmon enter the lake, were higher for hatchery-raised smolts than for wild smolt. These differences between wild and hatchery-reared salmon underline the importance of increasing the number of wild salmon in the system and indicate that remedial measures are needed to improve passage success. Text Atlantic salmon Salmo salar University of Massachusetts: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
institution Open Polar
collection University of Massachusetts: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
op_collection_id ftunivmassamh
language unknown
description Populations of migratory salmon and trout have worldwide shown a decline due to human activities. Over the years numerous measures have been undertaken to maintain these populations, and conservation of migratory salmonids requires understanding of their ecology atmultiple scales, combined with assessing anthropogenic impacts. The regulated River Klarälven and Lake Vänern host endemic populations of landlocked Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) and brown trout (Salmo trutta). The historically high abundances of the salmonids in the River Klarälven in the early 1800s have decreased dramatically, reaching all-time lows after the completion of all nine Swedish hydroelectric power stations in the 1960s. After an extensive stocking program and transportation of wild and hatchery-raised spawners past eight hydroelectric plants, catches from commercial, maintenance and sport fishing have again increased. Recently, increases in the proportion of wild salmon returning to the River Klarälven have generated interests in establishment of wild salmon inhabiting the entire River Klarälven, including upstream of the Norwegian border. To obtain information needed to produce a management plan for the salmon, we conducted a number of studies of upstream-migrating spawners and downstream-migrating smolts. For upstream migration, we compared migration behaviour of wild and hatchery reared salmon and found that wild fish swam directly to the spawning grounds and presumably spawned, whereas few salmon of hatchery-origin arrived at the spawning grounds, and if they did so they swam considerably more before settling down at the spawning grounds. Studies of smolt showed that only 16% of the salmon passed all eight dams, and that losses in the dam-free lower 25 km of the river, before the salmon enter the lake, were higher for hatchery-raised smolts than for wild smolt. These differences between wild and hatchery-reared salmon underline the importance of increasing the number of wild salmon in the system and indicate that remedial measures are needed to improve passage success.
format Text
author Bergman, Eva
Norrgård, Johnny
Hagelin, Anna
Calles, Olle
Piccolo, John
Greenberg, Larry
spellingShingle Bergman, Eva
Norrgård, Johnny
Hagelin, Anna
Calles, Olle
Piccolo, John
Greenberg, Larry
Concurrent Sessions B: Case Studies of Passage at Dams - Upstream and Downstream Migration of Atlantic Salmon-Conservation of a Landlocked Population in Sweden
author_facet Bergman, Eva
Norrgård, Johnny
Hagelin, Anna
Calles, Olle
Piccolo, John
Greenberg, Larry
author_sort Bergman, Eva
title Concurrent Sessions B: Case Studies of Passage at Dams - Upstream and Downstream Migration of Atlantic Salmon-Conservation of a Landlocked Population in Sweden
title_short Concurrent Sessions B: Case Studies of Passage at Dams - Upstream and Downstream Migration of Atlantic Salmon-Conservation of a Landlocked Population in Sweden
title_full Concurrent Sessions B: Case Studies of Passage at Dams - Upstream and Downstream Migration of Atlantic Salmon-Conservation of a Landlocked Population in Sweden
title_fullStr Concurrent Sessions B: Case Studies of Passage at Dams - Upstream and Downstream Migration of Atlantic Salmon-Conservation of a Landlocked Population in Sweden
title_full_unstemmed Concurrent Sessions B: Case Studies of Passage at Dams - Upstream and Downstream Migration of Atlantic Salmon-Conservation of a Landlocked Population in Sweden
title_sort concurrent sessions b: case studies of passage at dams - upstream and downstream migration of atlantic salmon-conservation of a landlocked population in sweden
publisher ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
publishDate 2013
url https://scholarworks.umass.edu/fishpassage_conference/2013/June27/65
genre Atlantic salmon
Salmo salar
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
Salmo salar
op_source International Conference on Engineering and Ecohydrology for Fish Passage
op_relation https://scholarworks.umass.edu/fishpassage_conference/2013/June27/65
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