2013
DOI: 10.1007/s11160-013-9341-7
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The use of hatchery technology for the conservation of Pacific and Atlantic salmon

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Cited by 24 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…It is possible that some of the fish that we classified as wild origin were, in fact, stocked as fry. Managers used fry stocking as a primary recovery tool in these rivers especially after 1990 (Hogan and Friedland 2010;Maynard and Trial 2014). Hatchery-origin stocked fry would be indistinguishable from wild-spawned fish based on scale readings, so it is unclear what percentage of fish in our sample were entirely wild.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is possible that some of the fish that we classified as wild origin were, in fact, stocked as fry. Managers used fry stocking as a primary recovery tool in these rivers especially after 1990 (Hogan and Friedland 2010;Maynard and Trial 2014). Hatchery-origin stocked fry would be indistinguishable from wild-spawned fish based on scale readings, so it is unclear what percentage of fish in our sample were entirely wild.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hatchery supplementation efforts have prevented remnant populations of Atlantic Salmon from going extinct, but their recovery has not been realized, and many populations remain dependent on hatchery intervention (NRC 2004;Fay et al 2006). Atlantic Salmon were first reared for supplementation of wild stocks in Maine during the late 1800s (Maynard and Trial 2014). Since that time, hatchery practices have evolved, with the development of a river-specific broodstock program in the early 1990s .…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This suite of papers synthesizes how modern conservation hatchery programs are providing demographic and genetic support to enhance recovery of endangered wild populations while attempting to minimize negative impacts of hatchery culture on fitness. First, Maynard and Trial (2014) provide a comprehensive overview of societal paradigm shifts where goals for Pacific and Atlantic salmon hatcheries over the past 140 years evolved from using hatcheries to improve on nature to a focus on natural rearing within hatcheries. The next two papers focus on the essential role hatcheries are playing in preventing extinction of critically endangered salmon populations.…”
Section: Conservation Hatcheriesmentioning
confidence: 99%