The behavioural and physiological effects of surgical implantation of dummy miniature acoustic transmitters into the peritonealcavities ofjuvenile Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar L., were assessed. lntraperitoneal implantations had no significant effect on growth, feeding or swimming behaviour in either parr or smolts. Recovery from the surgical implantation was both rapid and total; infection was absent; and physiological processes such as smoltification and maturation of testes in precocious parr were unaffected. Expulsion of the transmitter through the body wall, not through the implantation wound, occurred in a number of fish but without adversely affecting the animals. The intraperitoneal implantation technique is discussed in relation to its use during biotelemetry studies.
Thirty-two wild Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) smolts, tagged with miniature acoustic transmitters, were tracked in the River Conwy, North Wales, to describe the freshwater and estuarine patterns of migration. Migration in fresh water was predominantly nocturnal, although there was a seasonal change in this pattern with later run fish moving during both the day and night. Smolts tagged earlier in the study spent significantly longer in the river (mean 456 ± 43 h) before migrating into coastal waters than fish tagged later in the study (mean 201 ± 30 h). The movement of smolts through the estuary was indicative of a nocturnal selective ebb tide transport pattern of migration. All of the smolts migrated seawards on an ebb tide close to the surface and within the fastest moving section of the water column. The nocturnal pattern of migration would appear to be the result of an endogenous rhythm of swimming activity that results in the smolts moving up into the water column after dusk and migrating seawards. Smolt migration in the lower portion of the estuary was indicative of active directed swimming and there was no apparent period of acclimation required when moving from fresh to salt water.
2003. Managing Atlantic salmon in the mixed stock environment: challenges and considerations. e ICES Journal of Marine Science, 61: 1344e1358.Atlantic salmon, as a result of their population structure and behaviour, are potentially subject to a complex array of fisheries, ranging from those within rivers harvesting single stocks, to distant-water mixed stock fisheries that harvest fish from different countries, stock complexes, and continents. In addition, estuarine and in-river fisheries may catch fish from more than one stock or stock component, where these are present. One of the main challenges in managing salmon across this range of fisheries is to account for the differing status of stocks with respect to safe biological limits, noting that stocks of differing productivity may require different harvest strategies. Also, the existence of sequential harvest in different fisheries provides unique challenges, because decisions in an individual fishery cannot be made in isolation of the impacts of other fisheries on those stocks. We illustrate the uncertainties and complexities involved in managing mixed stocks of salmon, whether in homewaters or in distant-water fisheries, and examples are given to illustrate how science and management are, or should be, developing to face these challenges.
In the years 1985-1987, salmon were tracked in the estuary of the River Fowey, Cornwall using the ' sonar buoy * system developed at the M.A.F.F. Fisheries laboratory and described by Solomon & Potter (1988). Sixty-one salmon were caught and tagged in the estuary, 25 with radio and 36 with combined radio and acoustic transmitters. About half these fish were not recorded entering the freshwater reaches of the R. Fowey, and from tag recoveries it seemslikely that about 27% were returning to other rivers. For fish returning to the R. Fowey the time between tagging and entry into fresh water varied between 9 hand 130days. In the estuary the fish largely moved in the same direction as the tidal currents, although movements over the ground against the current were more common in the bottom 2 km and the top 2 km. During periods of low river-flow in summer all salmon tracked in the estuary dropped back out to sea where they stayed for varying periods: some of these made several sorties past the estuary mouth and on occasions well up the estuary before finally entering fresh water. During periods of higher river discharge, in both the summer and the autumn, some fish remained in the estuary for longer periods, sometimes holding position in deep, sheltered water. Most fish entered fresh water at night during periods of increased freshwater discharge, although at very high flows fish also entered in daylight.
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