From examination of the ratios of strontium to calcium laid down as a lifetime record in the otoliths of sea trout Salmo trutta from Gotland, Baltic Sea, it was found that: (1) the shortest stream was used mostly by precociously emigrant or coastally hatched spawners; (2) longer streams had more fish that underwent normal smoltification; (3) sea-caught fish were predominantly coastally hatched (presumably near stream mouths). Furthermore, some otoliths showed no evidence of a freshwater history at all, raising the possibility of a contingent of the coastal population that does not depend on riverine spawning. The results emphasize the importance of the coastal zone as natal and early life habitat for sea trout in the Baltic, particularly with respect to a potential change to a warmer climate which may exacerbate conditions within small, ephemeral trout streams. 2001 The Fisheries Society of the British Isles
There was no difference in survival or growth rate over 63 days for young-of-the-year sea trout Salmo trutta in fresh and brackish Baltic Sea water (6·7 psu). Hence, such sea trout parr that migrate from the freshwater habitat in which they hatch to the Baltic coastal zone, without smolting, should experience little or no physiological cost in survival and growth. 2001 The Fisheries Society of the British Isles
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