Matthew A Mensinger, Alessio Mortelliti, Joseph D Zydlewski
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引用次数: 0
摘要
在濒危鲑鱼种群的保护和恢复过程中,经常采用孵化场补充。在孵化阶段,孵化场的饲养方法通常会产生比野生同种鱼更大的个体。在这种“越大越好”的策略下,假设体型较大的鱼在迁徙过程中不太容易被捕食。我们在孵化场饲养的大西洋鲑鱼(Salmo salar)幼崽身上测试了这一假设,这些幼崽的叉长代表了自然和孵化场的起源,使我们能够将大小的影响从饲养历史中分离出来。从2023年5月到6月,我们通过美国缅因州佩诺布斯科特河的自由流动部分,对不同大小的声标记(n = 50)和系缚(n = 192)幼崽进行了捕食风险分析。在这两种方法中,超过50%的幼鱼被捕食,大多数捕食事件归因于小嘴鲈鱼(Micropterus dolomieu)。各种大小的幼崽都有类似的被捕食风险。在本研究的声学遥测部分,相对于标准孵化场的大小,较小的野生幼鱼的总体死亡率更高(95% vs. 75%),其中大多数发生在放生地点3公里范围内。总的来说,这些结果暗示了小口鲈鱼对佩诺布斯科特河淡水水域的幼鱼施加了强烈的捕食影响,而小口鲈鱼可能会面临更大的捕食风险,特别是在放养地点附近。
Evidence for size-based predation risk during Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) smolt migration.
Hatchery supplementation is frequently employed during the conservation and recovery of imperilled salmon populations. At the smolt stage, hatchery rearing practices often produce individuals that are larger than wild conspecifics. Under this 'bigger is better' strategy, it is assumed that larger fish are less susceptible to predation during migration. We tested this hypothesis on hatchery-reared Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) smolts with fork lengths representative of those of natural and hatchery origins, allowing us to isolate the influence of size from rearing history. From May to June 2023 we characterized predation risk for acoustic-tagged (n = 50) and tethered (n = 192) smolts of various sizes through a mostly free-flowing section of the Penobscot River, Maine, USA. Across both methods, more than 50% of smolts were predated, with the majority of predation events being attributed to smallmouth bass (Micropterus dolomieu). Tethered smolts of all sizes experienced similar predation risk. In the acoustic telemetry component of this study, smaller, wild-sized smolts incurred greater overall mortality relative to standard hatchery sizes (95% vs. 75%), the majority of which occurred within 3 km of the release site. Collectively, these results allude to a strong predation influence imposed by smallmouth bass on smolts in freshwater sections of the Penobscot River and small-bodied migrants may incur greater predation risk, particularly near stocking sites.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Fish Biology is a leading international journal for scientists engaged in all aspects of fishes and fisheries research, both fresh water and marine. The journal publishes high-quality papers relevant to the central theme of fish biology and aims to bring together under one cover an overall picture of the research in progress and to provide international communication among researchers in many disciplines with a common interest in the biology of fish.