Abstract

BackgroundAtlantic Salmon (Salmo salar) is an anadromous migratory species adapted to cool temperatures. It is protected by the Bern convention and by the European Habitats Directive. It has been listed as vulnerable by the French IUCN Red List. Salmon decline is the result of combined and cumulated, mainly anthropic, causes: climate change, increasingly high number of impoundments, degradation of water quality and habitat and over-exploitation by fisheries. Monitoring of this species has been carried out on three rivers in France (Southern part of the distribution area) to produce data and knowledge (growth, precocious maturity, survival) for stock management.For 24 years, a specific and standardised electric fishing protocol has been used to target young-of-the-year (0+ parr) Atlantic salmon. Sampling was restricted to areas with shallow running water that flows over a coarse bottom substrate, i.e. the preferred habitat of young salmon. This monitoring and inventory of growing areas thus allows assessment of juvenile recruitment and provides baseline data required to calculate total allowable catches (TACs).New informationThe dataset currently consists of 47,077 occurrence data points from 105 sites spanning up to 24 years in three different watersheds in France. Beyond our project, this dataset has a clear utility to research since it associates abundance measurements with the measurement of biological traits and the collection of tissue samples. It allows for current and retrospective characterisation of individuals or populations, according to life history traits and genetic features in relation to changes in environmental conditions. The fact that the monitoring takes place in France, the southern part of the distribution area, over 24 years, makes the dataset particularly relevant for climate change studies.

Highlights

  • The Environmental Research Observatory (ERO) on Diadromous Fish in Coastal rivers (DiaPFC) is a research infrastructure focused on studying the evolution of diadromous fish populations under the influence of human-induced and environmental changes

  • Coastal rivers are the main refuge for diadromous fish that have disappeared or dramatically decreased in larger rivers (30,000 fish caught on the Loire-Allier system in the 1890s (Bachelier R. 1963) to less than 1500 counted

  • A survey is conducted each year in early autumn to quantify the abundance of juvenile Atlantic salmon in three rivers on the Atlantic and Channel coasts: the Oir in Normandy, the Scorff in Brittany and the Nivelle in the Basque Country

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Summary

Background

Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar) is an anadromous migratory species adapted to cool temperatures It is protected by the Bern convention and by the European Habitats Directive. Salmon decline is the result of combined and cumulated, mainly anthropic, causes: climate change, increasingly high number of impoundments, degradation of water quality and habitat and over-exploitation by fisheries Monitoring of this species has been carried out on three rivers in France (Southern part of the distribution area) to produce data and knowledge (growth, precocious maturity, survival) for stock management. The dataset currently consists of 47,077 occurrence data points from 105 sites spanning up to 24 years in three different watersheds in France Beyond our project, this dataset has a clear utility to research since it associates abundance measurements with the measurement of biological traits and the collection of tissue samples. Biological traits, juvenile, coastal river, Salmo salar, salmon

Introduction
Findings
Sampling methods
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