Alternative competitive strategies and the cost of food acquisition in juvenile Atlantic salmon ( Salmo salar)

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Alternative competitive strategies and the cost of food acquisition in juvenile Atlantic salmon ( Salmo salar)

ReferencesShowing 10 of 21 papers
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Aggressiveness and the Foraging Behaviour of Young-of-the-Year Brook Charr (Salvelinus fontinalis)
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  • James W A Grant

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Early social status and the development of life-history strategies in Atlantic salmon
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  • Neil B Metcalfe + 3 more

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Effect of reward level on individual variability in demand feeding activity and growth rate in Arctic charr and rainbow trout
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  • 10.1111/j.1095-8649.1992.tb03871.x
Early predictors of life‐history events: the link between first feeding date, dominance and seaward migration in Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar L.
  • Dec 1, 1992
  • Journal of Fish Biology
  • N B Metcalfe + 1 more

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  • 10.1139/z92-017
The combined effects of stocking density and sustained exercise on the behaviour, food intake, and growth of juvenile Arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus L.)
  • Jan 1, 1992
  • Canadian Journal of Zoology
  • Jørgen Schou Christiansen + 2 more

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  • 10.1016/0306-4530(78)90012-4
The physiological response to group formation in adult male squirrel monkeys
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  • Psychoneuroendocrinology
  • Sally P Mendoza

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Social dominance and body size in Atlantic salmon parr, Salmo solar L.
  • Jun 1, 1990
  • Journal of Fish Biology
  • F A Huntingford + 4 more

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  • 10.1086/282427
Food and Space as Regulators of Salmonid Populations in Streams
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  • The American Naturalist
  • D W Chapman

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Social interactions and the distribution of food among one-sea-winter Atlantic salmon ( Salmo salar) in a sea-cage
  • Jan 1, 1996
  • Aquaculture
  • S Kadri + 3 more

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The effect of feeding hierarchy on individual variability in daily feeding of rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss (Walbaum)
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  • Journal of Fish Biology
  • I D Mccarthy + 2 more

CitationsShowing 10 of 96 papers
  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 13
  • 10.1111/jfb.12246
Identifying individual common carp Cyprinus carpio using scale pattern
  • Oct 17, 2013
  • Journal of Fish Biology
  • F A Huntingford + 2 more

Volunteers were able to match photographs of the same common carp Cyprinus carpio taken on two occasions. Images were identified correctly on 95·76% of occasions. Thus, scale patterns can be used for non-invasive identification of C. carpio over a period of time.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 139
  • 10.1242/jeb.01690
The effects of cortisol administration on social status and brain monoaminergic activity in rainbow troutOncorhynchus mykiss
  • Jul 15, 2005
  • Journal of Experimental Biology
  • Joseph D. DiBattista + 3 more

The hypothesis that circulating cortisol levels influence the outcome of social interactions in rainbow trout was tested. Juvenile rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss were given a single intraperitoneal (i.p.) implant containing either cortisol (110 mg kg(-1) fish), or cortisol plus the glucocorticoid receptor antagonist RU486 (mifepristone; 1100 mg kg(-1) fish), and sampled after 5 days of social interactions with either a similar sized (<1.5% difference in fork length) or smaller conspecific (>5% difference). Within size-matched pairs of fish, cortisol treatment significantly increased the probability that the treated fish within each pair became subordinate, an effect that was abolished by simultaneous administration of RU486. Cortisol treatment also reduced the usual success of the larger fish within a pair to preferentially become dominant from 86% to 40% of pairs. To investigate one potential mechanism underlying the apparent effect of cortisol in predisposing trout to low social status, fish were treated with cortisol or cortisol+RU486 for 5 days, after which brain monoamines [5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT); dopamine (DA)] and their major metabolites [5-hydroxyindolacetic acid (5-HIAA); 3,4-dihydroxy-phenylacetic acid (DOPAC)] were measured. Significant increases of serotonergic activity ([5-HIAA]/[5-HT] ratio) were detected in the telencephalon with cortisol treatment, an effect that was eliminated by simultaneous administration of RU486. Also, cortisol treatment significantly decreased dopaminergic activity in the telencephalon. Somewhat surprisingly, the effects of cortisol treatment on monoaminergic activity in the hypothalamus were opposite to those in the telencephalon. Moreover, in no case did administration of RU486 abolish these effects. These results suggest that the effects of cortisol on social status in rainbow trout may be mediated via the modulation of central signaling systems and subsequent changes in behaviour and/or competitive ability, although the exact site of action in the brain remains uncertain.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 32
  • 10.1111/j.1365-2435.2011.01901.x
The penalty for arriving late in emerging salmonid juveniles: differences between species correspond to their interspecific competitive ability
  • Sep 2, 2011
  • Functional Ecology
  • Helge Skoglund + 3 more

Summary1. Timing of offspring arrival (i.e. hatching, birth or emergence from nests) is commonly shown to have strong effects on their performance through body size and prior residency effects, but less is known about how such effects differ among species. The strength of such effects tends to be related to competitive intensity (e.g. population density). Variation in timing effects among species may therefore be expected to be related to their competitive ability.2. Here, we test this hypothesis by conducting sympatric and allopatric competition experiments in two ecologically similar salmonid species, Atlantic salmon and brown trout, at the onset of exogenous feeding. We first test the competitive ability of the two species in sympatric conditions in the absence of timing effects. We then test the strength of timing effects by manipulating this for the two species in allopatric conditions, and evaluate whether any difference in response to timing between the two species corresponds to species‐specific competitive abilities.3. In sympatry, trout outperformed salmon emerging at the same time, despite salmon being 32% larger at the time of emergence. Thus, trout was the stronger competitor.4. In allopatric treatments, late emerging trout performed significantly poorer in terms of survival and growth than late emerging salmon. Further, dominant trout appeared better able to monopolise resources at higher competitive intensities than dominant salmon. There were also indications that population regulation was stronger in brown trout. Replicates with a high initial density of salmon ended up with twice the final density of low‐density replicates, whereas trout ended up with similar final densities across treatments.5. The results demonstrate that species‐level differences in interspecific competitive ability corresponded with a higher intraspecific asymmetric competition among timing phenotypes, resulting in a higher penalty of emerging late in the more aggressive, dominant trout. Further, it suggests that intrinsic competitive abilities may affect the intensity of selection on offspring arrival, and thus likely affect evolution of phenological traits such as breeding time.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 10
  • 10.1139/z04-147
Density-dependent effects of prior residence and behavioural strategy on growth of stocked brown trout (Salmo trutta)
  • Oct 1, 2004
  • Canadian Journal of Zoology
  • Eva Brännäs + 2 more

When animals face temporally periods of strong intraspecific competition, prior residency, available resources, and their competitive abilities in terms of size and behavioural strategy affect their chances of survival. Density, individual size, and behavioural strategy had the strongest effect on growth. The mean growth rate of both resident and intruding brown trout (Salmo trutta L., 1758) decreased with increasing density, and the largest individuals were the most successful ones independently of the density of prior residency. An aggressive behavioural factor was beneficial at the lowest and intermediate densities, whereas a nonaggressive behavioural factor was beneficial at higher densities. Prior residency had no overall significant effect on growth, as the effect was highly density-dependent. The difference in growth rate between introduced and resident individuals was significant only at high density and low food abundance per individual. The intruders had a significantly lower growth rate at high densities and fewer individuals had a high growth rate. These results suggest that stocking fish at densities exceeding the carrying capacity of the habitat results in fewer individuals that are able to compete for resources than if fewer individuals were stocked. Brood stock can then be used in a more efficient way.

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 258
  • 10.1006/hbeh.2001.1707
Stress Responsiveness Affects Dominant–Subordinate Relationships in Rainbow Trout
  • Nov 1, 2001
  • Hormones and Behavior
  • T.G Pottinger + 1 more

Stress Responsiveness Affects Dominant–Subordinate Relationships in Rainbow Trout

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 66
  • 10.1016/s0044-8486(03)00528-3
The effect of competition on the feeding efficiency and feed handling behaviour in gilthead sea bream ( Sparus aurata L.) held in tanks
  • Sep 18, 2003
  • Aquaculture
  • J.E Andrew + 3 more

The effect of competition on the feeding efficiency and feed handling behaviour in gilthead sea bream ( Sparus aurata L.) held in tanks

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 16
  • 10.1007/s00360-012-0648-9
Low social status impairs hypoxia tolerance in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss)
  • Feb 15, 2012
  • Journal of Comparative Physiology B
  • J B Thomas + 1 more

In the present study, chronic behavioural stress resulting from low social status affected the physiological responses of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) to a subsequent acute stressor, exposure to hypoxia. Rainbow trout were confined in fork-length matched pairs for 48-72h, and social rank was assigned based on behaviour. Dominant and subordinate fish were then exposed individually to graded hypoxia (final water PO(2), PwO(2)=40Torr). Catecholamine mobilization profiles differed between dominant and subordinate fish. Whereas dominant fish exhibited generally low circulating catecholamine levels until a distinct threshold for release was reached (PwO(2)=51.5Torr corresponding to arterial PO(2), PaO(2)=24.1Torr), plasma catecholamine concentrations in subordinate fish were more variable and identification of a distinct threshold for release was problematic. Among fish that mobilized catecholamines (i.e. circulating catecholamines rose above the 95% confidence interval around the baseline value), however, the circulating levels achieved in subordinate fish were significantly higher (459.9±142.2nmolL(-1), mean±SEM, N=12) than those in dominant fish (130.9±37.9nmolL(-1), N=12). The differences in catecholamine mobilization occurred despite similar P(50) values in dominant (22.0±1.5Torr, N=6) and subordinate (22.1±2.2Torr, N=8) fish, and higher PaO(2) values in subordinate fish under severely hypoxic conditions (i.e. PwO(2)<60Torr). The higher PaO(2) values of subordinate fish likely reflected the greater ventilatory rates and amplitudes exhibited by these fish during severe hypoxia. At the most severe level of hypoxia, subordinate fish were unable to defend arterial blood O(2) content, which fell to approximately half (0.60±0.13mLO(2)g(-1) haemoglobin, N=9) that of dominant fish (1.08±0.09mLO(2)g(-1) haemoglobin, N=9). Collectively, these data indicate that chronic social stress impacts the ability of trout to respond to the additional, acute stress of hypoxia.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 8
  • 10.1894/0038-4909-58.2.192
Effects of Exotic Fishes on the Somatic Condition of the Endangered KillifishFundulus lima(Teleostei: Fundulidae) in Oases of Baja California Sur, Mexico
  • Jun 1, 2013
  • The Southwestern Naturalist
  • Asunción Andreu-Soler + 1 more

We assessed the effects of the abundance and biomass of four exotic fishes (common carp, Cyprinus carpio; guppy, Poecilia reticulata; green swordtail, Xiphophorus hellerii; and redbelly tilapia, Tilapia cf. zillii) on the residual somatic condition (Kr) of endangered Baja California killifish (Fundulus lima) in two oasis systems of Baja California Sur, Mexico. We used multiple regressions to analyze relationships between Kr of the killifish and 21 ecological variables. Biomass of redbelly tilapia and common carp were variables that better explained variation in Kr among populations of killifish. In both drainages, redbelly tilapia was the dominant fish, which relegated smaller habitat units to the other coexisting species of fishes, increasing competition among them and decreasing Kr and abundance of the endemic killifish. We concluded that Kr for populations of killifish may be a good indicator of the competitive interactions with exotic fishes in drainages of Baja California peninsula and should be considered when such stocks are subject to recovery plans or any other management program.Evaluamos los efectos de la abundancia y biomasa de cuatro especies ícticas exóticas (carpa común, Cyprinus carpio; gupi, Poecilia reticulata; espadita verde, Xiphophorus hellerii; y la tilapia panza roja, Tilapia cf. zillii) sobre la condición somática residual (Kr) de la sardinilla peninsular en peligro de extinción (Fundulus lima) en dos sistemas de oasis de Baja California Sur, México. Utilizamos regresiones múltiples para analizar las relaciones entre el Kr de la sardinilla peninsular y 21 variables ecológicas, siendo las biomasas de la tilapia panza roja y la carpa común las variables que mejor explicaron la variación de Kr para las poblaciones de sardinilla peninsular. La tilapia panza roja fue la especie dominante en ambas cuencas, relegando a las otras especies ícticas coexistentes a ocupar unidades de hábitat más pequeñas, incrementando una mayor competencia entre ellas y reduciendo el Kr y la abundancia de la sardinilla peninsular. Concluimos que el Kr de las poblaciones de sardinilla peninsular puede ser un buen indicador de las interacciones competitivas con especies exóticas en las cuencas hidrológicas de la península de Baja California y podría ser considerado cuando tales poblaciones estén sujetas a planes de recuperación o cualquier otro programa de manejo.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 8
  • 10.1016/j.jembe.2020.151318
Effects of size dominance on the survival, growth and physiological activities of juvenile pharaoh cuttlefish (Sepia pharaonis)
  • Feb 1, 2020
  • Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
  • Maowang Jiang + 4 more

Effects of size dominance on the survival, growth and physiological activities of juvenile pharaoh cuttlefish (Sepia pharaonis)

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 10
  • 10.1111/jfb.12478
Surface feeding and aggressive behaviour of diploid and triploid brown trout Salmo trutta during allopatric pair-wise matchings.
  • Jul 31, 2014
  • Journal of Fish Biology
  • A C Preston + 3 more

Diploid and triploid brown trout Salmo trutta were acclimated for 6 weeks on two feeding regimes (floating and sinking). Thereafter, aggression and surface feeding response were compared between pairs of all diploid, all triploid and diploid and triploid S. trutta in an experimental stream. In each pair-wise matching, fish of similar size were placed in allopatry and rank was determined by the total number of aggressive interactions recorded. Dominant individuals initiated more aggression than subordinates, spent more time defending a territory and positioned themselves closer to the surface food source (Gammarus pulex), whereas subordinates occupied the peripheries. In cross ploidy trials, diploid S. trutta were more aggressive than triploid, and dominated their sibling when placed in pair-wise matchings. Surface feeding, however, did not differ statistically between ploidy irrespective of feeding regime. Triploids adopted a sneak feeding strategy while diploids expended more time defending a territory. In addition, we also tested whether triploids exhibit a similar social dominance to diploids when placed in allopatry. Although aggression was lower in triploid pairs than in the diploid and triploid pairs, a dominance hierarchy was also observed between individuals of the same ploidy. Dominant triploid fish were more aggressive and consumed more feed items than subordinate individuals. Subordinate fish displayed a darker colour index than dominant fish suggesting increased stress levels. Dominant triploid fish, however, appeared to be more tolerant of subordinate individuals and did not display the same degree of invasive aggression as seen in the diploid and diploid or diploid and triploid matchings. These novel findings suggest that sterile triploid S. trutta feed similarly but are less aggressive than diploid trout. Future studies should determine the habitat choice of triploid S. trutta after release and the interaction between wild fish and triploids during the breeding season prior to utilization of triploids as an alternative management strategy within freshwater fisheries.

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Alternative competitive strategies in juvenile Atlantic salmon ( Salmo salar): evidence from fin damage
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Alternative competitive strategies in juvenile Atlantic salmon ( Salmo salar): evidence from fin damage

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All anadromous fishes, including juvenile salmon, encounter estuarine habitats as they transition from riverine to marine environments. We compare the estuarine use between juvenile Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) in the Penobscot River estuary and Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.) in the Columbia River estuary. Both estuaries have been degraded by anthropogenic activities. Atlantic and Pacific salmon populations in both basins rely heavily on hatchery inputs for persistence. Pacific salmon, as a group, represent a continuum of estuarine use, from species that move through rapidly to those that make extensive use of estuarine habitats. While Atlantic salmon estuarine use is predominantly similar to rapidly moving Pacific salmon, they can exhibit nearly the entire range of Pacific salmon estuarine use. Both slow and rapidly migrating Atlantic and Pacific salmon actively feed in estuarine environments, consuming insect and invertebrate prey. Interactions between juvenile salmon and estuarine fish communities are poorly understood in both estuaries, although they experience similar avian and marine mammal predators. Estuaries are clearly important for Atlantic and Pacific salmon, yet our understanding of this use is currently insufficient to make informed judgments about habitat quality or overall estuary health. This review of salmonid migration through and residency within estuaries identifies actions that could hasten restoration of both Atlantic and Pacific salmon populations.

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  • 10.1111/j.1600-0633.1996.tb00034.x
Lake‐use by juvenile Atlantic salmon (Salmo salarL.) and other salmonids in northern Norway
  • Mar 1, 1996
  • Ecology of Freshwater Fish
  • M Halvorsen + 1 more

Abstract–The utilization of lakes, and inlet and outlet streams by juvenile Atlantic salmon (Salmo salarL.), brown trout (Salmo truttaL.) and Arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus(L.), were investigated in 16 watercourses northern Norway, all known to inhabit salmon stocks. In lakes, fish were caught by small mesh size gill nets, while in rivers fish were caught electrofishing. In the shallow littoral (0‐3 m depth) there were juvenile salmon in 15 of 19 investigated lakes, juvenile trout in 17 and juvenile charr in seven. Trout dominated significantly in numbers in the shallow littoral of seven lakes, while salmon and charr dominated in three lakes each. When trout and salmon were frequent in the shallow littoral, charr was usually not present in this habitat, but were found in the profundal zone in most of the lakes. Atlantic salmon parr utilized both shallow and deep lakes, and used both stones and macrophytic vegetation as shelter. The utilization of lakes by salmon parr seemed to be closely related to utilization of small inlet streams for spawning. In most inlet and outlet streams salmon dominated over trout in numbers, while charr were absent. This is the first documentation of lake‐use by naturally occurring salmon parr in Scandinavia.

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  • Cite Count Icon 9
  • 10.1007/bf02274232
Effects of dietary testosterone on growth and sex ratio in juvenile Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)
  • Feb 1, 1992
  • Fish Physiology and Biochemistry
  • Kim M Lewis + 1 more

Diets to which testosterone (1 or 10 ng/g diet) had been added were fed to juvenile Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) for nine months beginning for months after hatching (Experiment 1) and upon completion of yolk absorption (Experiment 2) to determine the effects on growth, gonadal development, and sex ratio. Dietary testosterone at 10 ng/g fed to juvenile salmon at four months after hatching (Exp. 1) induced significant changes in condition factor (0.69±0.01) compared to controls (0.79±0.01) at the end of the test period. In both experiments, salmon treated with 10 ng/g diet induced a significantly higher percentage of male fish compared to controls. Dietary testosterone at 1 ng/g fed to juvenile salmon beginning four months after hatching induced significant increases in weight (18.95±0.99) and length (13.58±0.23) compared to controls (14.55±1.50 and 11.94±0.43, respectively). In Experiment 1 or 2, there was no apparent influence of dietary testosterone on precocious male sexual development. Dietary testosterone at 1 or 10 ng/g fed to juvenile salmon upon completion of yolk absorption (Exp. 2) induced no consistent changes in growth in juvenile Atlantic salmon. These studies indicate that low levels of dietary testosterone may influence physiological responses in juvenile Atlantic salmon dependent upon timing of treatment.

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  • 10.1097/aud.0000000000001565
Comparison of Performance for Cochlear-Implant Listeners Using Audio Processing Strategies Based on Short-Time Fast Fourier Transform or Spectral Feature Extraction.
  • Sep 6, 2024
  • Ear and hearing
  • Yue Zhang + 7 more

We compared sound quality and performance for a conventional cochlear-implant (CI) audio processing strategy based on short-time fast-Fourier transform (Crystalis) and an experimental strategy based on spectral feature extraction (SFE). In the latter, the more salient spectral features (acoustic events) were extracted and mapped into the CI stimulation electrodes. We hypothesized that (1) SFE would be superior to Crystalis because it can encode acoustic spectral features without the constraints imposed by the short-time fast-Fourier transform bin width, and (2) the potential benefit of SFE would be greater for CI users who have less neural cross-channel interactions. To examine the first hypothesis, 6 users of Oticon Medical Digisonic SP CIs were tested in a double-blind design with the SFE and Crystalis strategies on various aspects: word recognition in quiet, speech-in-noise reception threshold (SRT), consonant discrimination in quiet, listening effort, melody contour identification (MCI), and subjective sound quality. Word recognition and SRTs were measured on the first and last day of testing (4 to 5 days apart) to assess potential learning and/or acclimatization effects. Other tests were run once between the first and last testing day. Listening effort was assessed by measuring pupil dilation. MCI involved identifying a five-tone contour among five possible contours. Sound quality was assessed subjectively using the multiple stimulus with hidden reference and anchor (MUSHRA) paradigm for sentences, music, and ambient sounds. To examine the second hypothesis, cross-channel interaction was assessed behaviorally using forward masking. Word recognition was similar for the two strategies on the first day of testing and improved for both strategies on the last day of testing, with Crystalis improving significantly more. SRTs were worse with SFE than Crystalis on the first day of testing but became comparable on the last day of testing. Consonant discrimination scores were higher for Crystalis than for the SFE strategy. MCI scores and listening effort were not substantially different across strategies. Subjective sound quality scores were lower for the SFE than for the Crystalis strategy. The difference in performance with SFE and Crystalis was greater for CI users with higher channel interaction. CI-user performance was similar with the SFE and Crystalis strategies. Longer acclimatization times may be required to reveal the full potential of the SFE strategy.

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  • 10.3389/fvets.2021.638888
Ontogenetic Change in Behavioral Responses to Structural Enrichment From Fry to Parr in Juvenile Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar L.)
  • Jul 26, 2021
  • Frontiers in Veterinary Science
  • Ingeborg Bjerkvik Alnes + 3 more

Enrichment is widely used as a tool for studying how changes in environment affect animal behavior. Here, we report an experimental study investigating if behaviors shaped by stimuli from environmental enrichment depending on the stage animals are exposed to enrichment. We used juvenile Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) in their first autumn. This is a species commonly reared for conservation purposes. Previous work has shown that environmental enrichment had no effect on long-term survival when the fry stage (smaller than 70 mm) was released, but that if late parr stages (larger than 70 mm) are released, enrichment is reported to have a positive effect on smolt migration survival. Here, we explored the effect of enrichment at two different stages of development. Both stages were reared and treated for 7 weeks (fry at 11–18 weeks and parr at 24–31 weeks after hatching) before tested for behavior. Responses known to be associated with exploratory behavior, activity, and stress coping were quantified by testing 18-week-old fry and 31-week-old parr in a six-chamber maze on 7 successive days after rearing in structurally enriched (plastic plants and tubes) or plain impoverished rearing environments. The data show that Atlantic salmon are sensitive to stimuli from structural enrichment when they are parr, but not when in the fry stage. Parr deprived of enrichment (control treatment) were reluctant to start exploring the maze, and when they did, they spent a longer time frozen than enriched parr, suggesting that deprivation of enrichment at this life can be stressful. Our data suggest that structural enrichment could have the potential to improve welfare for salmonids in captivity and for survival of released juvenile salmon if structural enrichment is provided at the parr stage and the fish reared for conservation are released at the parr stage.

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  • 10.1111/j.0022-1112.2006.00986.x
Temporal and spatial variation in growth of juvenile Atlantic salmon
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  • J V Arnekleiv + 2 more

Spatial and temporal variation in length‐at‐age and environmental factors affecting variation in growth rate of juvenile Atlantic salmonSalmo salarwere studied using data from a long‐term study in the River Stjørdalselva, central Norway. Mean annual instantaneous growth rate among 1+ and 2+year juvenile Atlantic salmon varied between 0·59 and 1·50 g g−1 year−1and mean instantaneous daily growth rate of young‐of‐the‐year (YOY) varied between 0·013 and 0·033 g g−1 day−1. Between year variation in growth was larger than the within year intra‐watercourse spatial variation. For YOY and 1+year Atlantic salmon, a major part of the observed between year variation in growth rates was explained by variation in mean daily water discharge and spring temperature. For 2+year juvenile Atlantic salmon, mean daily water discharge and cohort density were the only variables to significantly explain variation in growth rates. A large part of the within water‐course spatial variation could not be explained by temperature variations and juvenile Atlantic salmon in the uppermost areas of the river, experiencing the lowest ambient temperatures during the growth period, displayed the highest growth rates. Within the baselines set by temperature, biotic and abiotic factors connected to water flow regime and variation in food availability are suggested to be a major determinants of the temporal and spatial variation in juvenile Atlantic salmon growth rates.

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Alternative reproductive tactics in atlantic salmon: factors affecting mature parr success
  • Feb 22, 1997
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  • D Thomaz + 2 more

In Atlantic salmon, as in most salmonids, males can mature early in the life cycle, as small freshwater fish, termed parr, and/or undergo a sea migration before maturing as full–size adults. The alternative life histories are contingent on environmental and social circumstances, such as growth rate, territory quality or any other factor that affects the individual9s state. In order to model the choice of life history in this group of commercially valuable species, it is necessary to understand not only the relative contribution of the different male types to subsequent generations, but also to know the factors that affect reproductive success in each type. In this paper we present the results of a study designed to investigate the factors that affect the reproductive success of mature parr. We used highly polymorphic minisatellite DNA markers to analyse paternity in a series of mating experiments where the number and body size of parr were manipulated. The fraction of eggs fertilized by mature parr ranged from 26 to 40 per cent, with individual parr fertilizing up to 26 per cent of the eggs. A strong positive correlation was found between parr size and reproductive success. The relative success of parr decreased with increasing parr number. Data from this and other studies on variation in the timing and degree of parr reproductive success are discussed in relation to the evolution of male mating strategies and life history in salmonids.

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  • Cite Count Icon 3
  • 10.1139/cjfas-2017-0500
Density-independent use of shallow riverine areas in juvenile Atlantic salmon
  • Jul 1, 2019
  • Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
  • Michael Puffer + 8 more

Habitat use of aquatic organisms is essential to evaluate effects of many environmental challenges like effects of hydropower regulation, where stranding may occur under hydropeaking (rapid dewatering of shallow river areas). Experimental studies as well as observations from nature with juvenile Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) show that the proportion of the population that uses shallow depth was both independent of population density and decreases with fish size. Experiments were conducted both in the presence and in absence of older fish, during day and night, and during all four seasons. Juvenile salmon from deep areas may therefore distribute into the shallow areas even when fish density becomes reduced. Thus, low density does not lead to reduced stranding risk, and shallow areas may therefore function as a sink in a within-generation source–sink dynamic under a repeated hydropeaking scenario. The sink effect of rapid dewatering in shallow areas may be mitigated by seasonal and diurnal regulation of hydropeaking activity, but dewatering may still result in extinction of weak populations.

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  • 10.1006/anbe.1996.0144
Can juvenile Atlantic salmon use multiple cue systems in spatial learning?
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The xenoestrogen 4-nonylphenol modulates hepatic gene expression of pregnane X receptor, aryl hydrocarbon receptor, CYP3A and CYP1A1 in juvenile Atlantic salmon ( Salmo salar)
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  • Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part C: Toxicology &amp; Pharmacology
  • Valentina Meucci + 1 more

The xenoestrogen 4-nonylphenol modulates hepatic gene expression of pregnane X receptor, aryl hydrocarbon receptor, CYP3A and CYP1A1 in juvenile Atlantic salmon ( Salmo salar)

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 2
  • 10.1111/j.1095-8649.2003.0216l.x
On the interaction of turbulent flow and feeding behaviour of juvenile Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar)
  • Dec 1, 2003
  • Journal of Fish Biology
  • E C Enders + 3 more

Anthropogenic activities can dramatically modify the riverine habitat of juvenile Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar). In the perspective of protecting and restoring the fluvial habitat, bioenergetic models are often used to estimate fish habitat quality. These models determine the habitat quality as the ratio between the energetic gains (food) and costs (growth, metabolism) of a fish. The energetic costs of swimming in a river are generally estimated using the average flow velocity without consideration of the effect of turbulence. Juvenile Atlantic salmon (JAS) live in rivers characterized by intense velocity fluctuations, which are often described as a succession of high‐ and low‐speed flow regions. These flow structures are likely to affect the JAS activity that consists of long periods of sit‐and‐wait at the top of a protuberant rock interrupted by short bursting motions to capture drifting food particles. To minimize the energetic costs, it is hypothesized that JAS use low‐speed flow regions to initiate and undertake their feeding motions. To improve bioenergetic modelling, this study aimed at analyzing the relation between turbulent flow structures and the feeding behaviour of JAS in a natural gravel‐bed river. We filmed eight JAS during 30 min with a submersible video camera while simultaneously measuring velocity fluctuations close to the fish in the St. Marguerite River, Quebec, Canada. Our results show that the proportion of time used for feeding motions decreases with increasing turbulent intensity and mean flow velocity; and that JAS do not seem to prefer low‐speed flow regions to initiate their feeding motions.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1111/eff.12830
Differentiation of Parasite Communities in Juveniles of Atlantic Salmon and Brown Trout as an Indicator of Their Population Segregation in Three Scottish Rivers
  • Dec 27, 2024
  • Ecology of Freshwater Fish
  • Eugeny P Ieshko + 4 more

ABSTRACTInteractive segregation is considered to be the main mechanism for reducing competition, limiting the size and overlap of niches when juvenile Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar Linnaeus, 1758) and brown trout (Salmo trutta Linnaeus, 1758) co‐occur. However, the differences observed between allopatric and sympatric populations of these fishes in their habitat utilisation are not always evident. We propose to use degree of the parasite communities divergence as an integral indicator of segregation, as it is known that similar infection is found in fish with similar behaviour and habitat use and vice versa. The parasite communities were studied in juvenile Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar Linnaeus, 1758) and brown trout (Salmo trutta Linnaeus, 1758) inhabiting the rivers South Esk and Spey (north‐eastern Scotland, flowing into the North Sea) and the Annan (south‐western Scotland, flowing into the Irish Sea). The parasitological data were used to test the interactive segregation hypothesis, which is thought to be the main mechanism of avoiding competition and determining the degree of niche overlap between sympatric fish species. In all the rivers, parasite communities of brown trout were richer than those of salmon. Ordination of infracommunities using non‐metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) indicated the greatest and the smallest overlap between parasite communities of salmon and brown trout in the South Esk and the Spey, respectively. The analysis of similarity (ANOSIM) confirmed that intraspecific differences in the parasite communities of salmon and brown trout were consistently lower than interspecific differences, increasing from the South Esk via the Annan to the Spey. The trend of increasing segregation of the host populations was supported by NMDS‐coordination of the component communities of the parasites based on parasite prevalence, comparison of lists of core species and species accumulation curves. Accumulation models indicated the lowest expected species richness of infracommunities in both hosts in the South Esk (a small mountain river), and the highest expected species richness in the Spey (the largest of the studied rivers with a high habitat diversity). In the Annan, a southern river flowing in the plains but similar to the South Esk in length and catchment area, the parasite infracommunities of salmon were as poor as in the South Esk, but those of brown trout were as rich as in the Spey. This differentiation is presumably associated with a high trophicity of the Annan and thus an improved food resources for fish. Juvenile brown trout uses these food resources more actively than juvenile salmon, which is more narrowly specialised and prefers habitats with fast‐flowing water. A smaller divergence of the model curves in the Annan as compared to the Spey, indicating a lesser segregation of the host populations, can be explained by a much higher rate of parasite species accumulation in salmon. The potential of using fish parasites as biological indicators in freshwater ecosystems is discussed.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 10
  • 10.1007/s00265-008-0695-0
Does interspecific competition influence relationships between heterozygosity and fitness-related behaviors in juvenile Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)?
  • Dec 24, 2008
  • Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
  • S Blanchet + 2 more

Very few studies have investigated the effect of genetic diversity on the behavioral and phenotypic traits linked to the competitive ability of individuals. In this study, we reared juvenile Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) alone or with the competitive rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) in order to: (1) to assess correlations between heterozygosity and traits related to individual competitive ability [i.e., heterozygosity–fitness correlations (HFCs)] in Atlantic salmon, and (2) to evaluate the effect of the competitive rainbow trout on any such HFCs. We also tested whether a few loci had a disproportionately large effect (i.e., the local effect hypothesis) or, on the contrary, if all loci contributed equally (i.e., the global effect hypothesis) in explaining the observed HFCs. We found significant HFCs for phenotypic traits related to the competitive ability of juvenile Atlantic salmon, i.e., the growth rate and the distance to the feeding source. Some HFCs were nonlinear, suggesting that individuals with intermediate levels of heterozygosity were favored. In addition, we found that the competition exerted by rainbow trout only weakly modified these HFCs as the relationships were highly consistent across treatments. We demonstrated that the local-effect hypothesis best explained both linear and nonlinear HFCs. Overall, our results illustrated the importance of genetic diversity in explaining the behavioral variability observed within populations. Moreover, we provide evidence that, even if a competitive species can have strong ecological effects, the relationships between genetic diversity and fitness-related traits in juvenile Atlantic salmon were not influenced by such effects.

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