Behavioral study of coexisting populations of anadromous brown trout and arctic char that overwinter in a subarctic lake

This was an acoustic telemetry study on winter ecology and migratory behavior of anadromous brown trout (salmo trutta) and arctic char (salvelinus alpinus). The two species are coexisting in a subarctic lake of northern Norway called Botnvatnet. There is little research conducted on winterbehavior o...

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Main Author: Monsen, Geir-Johnny
Other Authors: Haugen, Thrond Oddvar, Kristensen, Torstein, Pedersen, Jan Karsten
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2633868
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spelling ftunivmob:oai:nmbu.brage.unit.no:11250/2633868 2023-05-15T14:49:49+02:00 Behavioral study of coexisting populations of anadromous brown trout and arctic char that overwinter in a subarctic lake Monsen, Geir-Johnny Haugen, Thrond Oddvar Kristensen, Torstein Pedersen, Jan Karsten Norway 2019 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2633868 eng eng Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2633868 Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internasjonal http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.no CC-BY-NC-ND VDP::Landbruks- og Fiskerifag: 900 Master thesis 2019 ftunivmob 2021-09-23T20:16:29Z This was an acoustic telemetry study on winter ecology and migratory behavior of anadromous brown trout (salmo trutta) and arctic char (salvelinus alpinus). The two species are coexisting in a subarctic lake of northern Norway called Botnvatnet. There is little research conducted on winterbehavior of these two species, and the aim of this study was to enlighten some of the secrets that were kept in the dark and cold life under the ice. To get a better picture of the behavioral patterns 24 acoustic receivers were constantly logging signals from acoustic tags operated into the fish. There was a great difference in the habitat utilization between the two species. Arctic char utilized water at a median depth of 12-15 meters during the coldest months, while the brown trout stayed at 3-5 meters. Estimations of both swimming distance and home range size revealed that the arctic char was most active during the study period, swimming a median length of 30 kilometers each day. However, the brown trout showed that it also was surprisingly active with an average swimming distance of 20 kilometers a day. Some individuals of both species even swam an average distance of 70-80 kilometers each day for some months during the study. Parameter estimates of the most fitted models revealed that the factors species, sex, month and length was important influences on the habitat utilization. The effect of length had complicated interactions and varied from month to month between species and genders. It is likely to believe, considering the activity level of the fish during the winter, that they were gaining energy in form of eating. All the tagged individuals survived the winter which indicates that wintering in freshwater may be beneficial and improve the survival rate of these salmonids. The candidate fish was captured and tagged in their spawning river which ran into the lake on the south end. All the tagged individuals returned to the lake after spawning and utilized the lake as a winter refuge. Asspring unfolded a big part of the tagged individuals migrated to the sea. Parameter estimates of the most supported GLMsea-migration timing model predicted that increased water temperature (4°C) and raised water level (136 kPa) triggered the marine migration of the arctic char. There was not conducted a sea-migration model on the brown trout due to lack of individuals, but data on migration, water flow and water temperature (figure 4.8) strongly suggest the same pattern that were shown on the arctic char. The brown troutstarted the descend to the sea roughly two weeks (20.05.2016) before the arctic char (08.06.2016). M-NF Master Thesis Arctic Northern Norway Salvelinus alpinus Subarctic Open archive Norwegian University of Life Sciences: Brage NMBU Arctic Norway Botnvatnet ENVELOPE(15.522,15.522,67.080,67.080)
institution Open Polar
collection Open archive Norwegian University of Life Sciences: Brage NMBU
op_collection_id ftunivmob
language English
topic VDP::Landbruks- og Fiskerifag: 900
spellingShingle VDP::Landbruks- og Fiskerifag: 900
Monsen, Geir-Johnny
Behavioral study of coexisting populations of anadromous brown trout and arctic char that overwinter in a subarctic lake
topic_facet VDP::Landbruks- og Fiskerifag: 900
description This was an acoustic telemetry study on winter ecology and migratory behavior of anadromous brown trout (salmo trutta) and arctic char (salvelinus alpinus). The two species are coexisting in a subarctic lake of northern Norway called Botnvatnet. There is little research conducted on winterbehavior of these two species, and the aim of this study was to enlighten some of the secrets that were kept in the dark and cold life under the ice. To get a better picture of the behavioral patterns 24 acoustic receivers were constantly logging signals from acoustic tags operated into the fish. There was a great difference in the habitat utilization between the two species. Arctic char utilized water at a median depth of 12-15 meters during the coldest months, while the brown trout stayed at 3-5 meters. Estimations of both swimming distance and home range size revealed that the arctic char was most active during the study period, swimming a median length of 30 kilometers each day. However, the brown trout showed that it also was surprisingly active with an average swimming distance of 20 kilometers a day. Some individuals of both species even swam an average distance of 70-80 kilometers each day for some months during the study. Parameter estimates of the most fitted models revealed that the factors species, sex, month and length was important influences on the habitat utilization. The effect of length had complicated interactions and varied from month to month between species and genders. It is likely to believe, considering the activity level of the fish during the winter, that they were gaining energy in form of eating. All the tagged individuals survived the winter which indicates that wintering in freshwater may be beneficial and improve the survival rate of these salmonids. The candidate fish was captured and tagged in their spawning river which ran into the lake on the south end. All the tagged individuals returned to the lake after spawning and utilized the lake as a winter refuge. Asspring unfolded a big part of the tagged individuals migrated to the sea. Parameter estimates of the most supported GLMsea-migration timing model predicted that increased water temperature (4°C) and raised water level (136 kPa) triggered the marine migration of the arctic char. There was not conducted a sea-migration model on the brown trout due to lack of individuals, but data on migration, water flow and water temperature (figure 4.8) strongly suggest the same pattern that were shown on the arctic char. The brown troutstarted the descend to the sea roughly two weeks (20.05.2016) before the arctic char (08.06.2016). M-NF
author2 Haugen, Thrond Oddvar
Kristensen, Torstein
Pedersen, Jan Karsten
format Master Thesis
author Monsen, Geir-Johnny
author_facet Monsen, Geir-Johnny
author_sort Monsen, Geir-Johnny
title Behavioral study of coexisting populations of anadromous brown trout and arctic char that overwinter in a subarctic lake
title_short Behavioral study of coexisting populations of anadromous brown trout and arctic char that overwinter in a subarctic lake
title_full Behavioral study of coexisting populations of anadromous brown trout and arctic char that overwinter in a subarctic lake
title_fullStr Behavioral study of coexisting populations of anadromous brown trout and arctic char that overwinter in a subarctic lake
title_full_unstemmed Behavioral study of coexisting populations of anadromous brown trout and arctic char that overwinter in a subarctic lake
title_sort behavioral study of coexisting populations of anadromous brown trout and arctic char that overwinter in a subarctic lake
publisher Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2633868
op_coverage Norway
long_lat ENVELOPE(15.522,15.522,67.080,67.080)
geographic Arctic
Norway
Botnvatnet
geographic_facet Arctic
Norway
Botnvatnet
genre Arctic
Northern Norway
Salvelinus alpinus
Subarctic
genre_facet Arctic
Northern Norway
Salvelinus alpinus
Subarctic
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2633868
op_rights Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internasjonal
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.no
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-ND
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