Abstract
Salmon from a 3 male×3 female sockeye salmon cross were raised under three different light regimes (UV: 300–850 nm for 8 hours day-1, visible: 400–850 nm for 8 hours day-1, and a control in which eggs were kept in darkness until hatching, followed by increasing amounts of light as the embryos approached swim-up) up to the parr interval (105 days from fertilization). The dose rates (W m-2), and total intensities per day (J m-2), for each treatment were less than 0.46 and 0.28 times of those measured in the shaded part of a stream, respectively. Egg mortality was higher for the UV and visible treatments compared to the control, and the number of alevins alive after day 83 was significantly different between treatments: highest for the control and lowest for the UV treatment. Eggs and hatched fish from female F2 suffered higher mortality than those from the other two females raising the possibility that sensitivity to UV-B in sockeye salmon may be either a maternally inherited trait or due to physiological or physical differences between egg groups. Alevins and parr from the control treatment transferred to the UV treatment suffered little mortality compared to animals raised in the UV and visible treatments from fertilization. These results, in conjunction with light measurements from streams, suggest that light and UV-B radiation could be a source of young salmon mortality in perturbed environments such as those resulting after forestry intervention.
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