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A physical bottleneck increases predation on Atlantic salmon smolts during seaward migration in an Irish index river
Sortland, L.K.; Wightman, G.; Flávio, H.; Aarestrup, K.; Roche, W. (2024). A physical bottleneck increases predation on Atlantic salmon smolts during seaward migration in an Irish index river. Fish. Manage. Ecol. Early view: e12779. https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/fme.12779
In: Fisheries Management and Ecology. Blackwel Science Ltd.: Oxford. ISSN 0969-997X; e-ISSN 1365-2400, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Interspecific relationships > Predation
    Measurement > Telemetry
Author keywords
    freshwater | marine | post-smolt | salmonid 

Authors  Top 
  • Sortland, L.K.
  • Wightman, G., more
  • Flávio, H.
  • Aarestrup, K.
  • Roche, W.

Abstract
    Counting departing smolts and returning adults in index rivers is essential to estimate marine survival and track population trends of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar). However, mortalities between counting facilities and a river mouth can skew survival estimates. We used acoustic and radio telemetry to investigate survival, mortality sources and behaviour of wild salmon smolts in the River Erriff, Ireland's index river, and Killary Fjord. Smolts were tagged with acoustic tags in 2017 (n = 40) and 2018 (n = 35) and radio tags in 2018 (n = 30). Survival was low for acoustic-tagged smolts in 2017 (26%) and 2018 (47%), mainly due to riverine mortality. Terrestrial or avian predators consumed 65% of acoustic-tagged smolts in 2017 and 67% of radio-tagged smolts in 2018. Nocturnal migration and ebb tide transportation likely contributed to high estuary survival. High predation on smolts emphasised the importance of assessing freshwater mortality for effective salmon management.

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