Abstract

BackgroundAcoustic telemetry is increasingly being used as a tool to measure survival, migration timing and behaviour of fish. Tagged fish may fall prey to other animals with the tag continuing to be detected whilst it remains in the gastrointestinal tract of the predator. Failure to identify post-predation detections introduces “predation bias” into the data. We employed a new predator tag technology in the first known field trial to understand the extent these tags could reduce predation bias in Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) smolt migration through a 65-km zone beginning in freshwater and extending through an estuary. These tags signal predation by detecting a pH change in the predators’ gut during digestion of a tagged prey. We quantified survival and timing bias by comparing measurements from non- and post-predated detections of tagged individuals’ to only those detections where predation was not signalled.ResultsOf the 50 fish tagged, 41 were detected with 24 of these signalling as predated. Predation bias was greatest in the upper estuary and decreased towards the bay. Survival bias peaked at 11.6% at river km 54. Minimum and maximum migration time were both biased long and were 16% and 4% greater than bias corrected timing at river km 66 and 54, respectively. After correcting for bias, the apparent survival from release through freshwater and estuary was 19% and minimum and maximum migration timing was 6.6 and 7.0 days, respectively.ConclusionsUsing this tag, we identified a high proportion of predation events that may have otherwise gone unnoticed using conventional acoustic tags. Estimated survival presented the greatest predation bias in the upper estuary which gradually declined to nearly no apparent bias in the lower estuary as predated tags failed through time to be detected. This is most likely due to tag expulsion from the predator between or upstream of receiver arrays. Whilst we have demonstrated that predation can bias telemetry results, it appears to be rather short-lived given the apparent retention times of these tags within the predators introducing the bias.

Highlights

  • Acoustic telemetry is increasingly being used as a tool to measure survival, migration timing and behaviour of fish

  • Detections and migration timing Of the 50 smolts tagged and released at river km 92, 41 individuals were detected at receiver arrays within the study site

  • The number of individuals detected at successive receiver arrays decreased downstream for both groups; comparatively fewer individuals were detected from the clean group (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Acoustic telemetry is increasingly being used as a tool to measure survival, migration timing and behaviour of fish. We employed a new predator tag technology in the first known field trial to understand the extent these tags could reduce predation bias in Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) smolt migration through a 65-km zone beginning in freshwater and extending through an estuary. With the increased adoption of acoustic telemetry as a tracking method came the development of techniques to classify detections resulting from a predator’s movement as opposed to that of the individual tagged These classification techniques evolved from observations [5], towards subjective and qualitative analyses [6], and more recently, to quantitative approaches [2, 4, 7]. All current quantitative methods classify predated versus non-predated individuals based on behavioural differences between the target species and potential predators This implies that suspected predatory species must be tagged and detected within the extent of the study. As a result, accounting for the predation event requires either a subjective decision as to when the event occurred or the removal of all detections from the individual suspected to have been predated, thereby reducing valuable sample size

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