Tag Retention and Survival of Age-0 Atlantic Salmon following Surgical Implantation with Passive Integrated Transponder Tags

We evaluated an alternative to using hypodermic needles to implant passive integrated transponder (PIT) tags in the body cavities of juvenile salmonids. We used surgical techniques to place PIT tags into the body cavities of 3,037 age-0 Atlantic salmon Salmo salar and then held fish under hatchery c...

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Main Authors: Gries, G, Letcher, B H
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.umass.edu/fishpassage_journal_articles/215
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spelling ftunivmassamh:oai:scholarworks.umass.edu:fishpassage_journal_articles-1214 2023-05-15T15:28:11+02:00 Tag Retention and Survival of Age-0 Atlantic Salmon following Surgical Implantation with Passive Integrated Transponder Tags Gries, G Letcher, B H 2002-01-01T08:00:00Z https://scholarworks.umass.edu/fishpassage_journal_articles/215 unknown ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst https://scholarworks.umass.edu/fishpassage_journal_articles/215 Journal Articles Atlantic salmon salmon survival transponder text 2002 ftunivmassamh 2022-01-09T19:35:49Z We evaluated an alternative to using hypodermic needles to implant passive integrated transponder (PIT) tags in the body cavities of juvenile salmonids. We used surgical techniques to place PIT tags into the body cavities of 3,037 age-0 Atlantic salmon Salmo salar and then held fish under hatchery conditions for 9 months. Tag retention was 99.8% (six fish lost tags), and survival was 94.3% (174 fish died) after controlling for initial mortality (0.7%). A single tagger was able to tag 80-100 fish per hour. Surgically implanting PIT tags into the body cavities of age-0 Atlantic salmon proved to be a viable alternative to using hypodermic needles. 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
topic Atlantic salmon
salmon
survival
transponder
spellingShingle Atlantic salmon
salmon
survival
transponder
Gries, G
Letcher, B H
Tag Retention and Survival of Age-0 Atlantic Salmon following Surgical Implantation with Passive Integrated Transponder Tags
topic_facet Atlantic salmon
salmon
survival
transponder
description We evaluated an alternative to using hypodermic needles to implant passive integrated transponder (PIT) tags in the body cavities of juvenile salmonids. We used surgical techniques to place PIT tags into the body cavities of 3,037 age-0 Atlantic salmon Salmo salar and then held fish under hatchery conditions for 9 months. Tag retention was 99.8% (six fish lost tags), and survival was 94.3% (174 fish died) after controlling for initial mortality (0.7%). A single tagger was able to tag 80-100 fish per hour. Surgically implanting PIT tags into the body cavities of age-0 Atlantic salmon proved to be a viable alternative to using hypodermic needles.
format Text
author Gries, G
Letcher, B H
author_facet Gries, G
Letcher, B H
author_sort Gries, G
title Tag Retention and Survival of Age-0 Atlantic Salmon following Surgical Implantation with Passive Integrated Transponder Tags
title_short Tag Retention and Survival of Age-0 Atlantic Salmon following Surgical Implantation with Passive Integrated Transponder Tags
title_full Tag Retention and Survival of Age-0 Atlantic Salmon following Surgical Implantation with Passive Integrated Transponder Tags
title_fullStr Tag Retention and Survival of Age-0 Atlantic Salmon following Surgical Implantation with Passive Integrated Transponder Tags
title_full_unstemmed Tag Retention and Survival of Age-0 Atlantic Salmon following Surgical Implantation with Passive Integrated Transponder Tags
title_sort tag retention and survival of age-0 atlantic salmon following surgical implantation with passive integrated transponder tags
publisher ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
publishDate 2002
url https://scholarworks.umass.edu/fishpassage_journal_articles/215
genre Atlantic salmon
Salmo salar
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
Salmo salar
op_source Journal Articles
op_relation https://scholarworks.umass.edu/fishpassage_journal_articles/215
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