The use of predator tags to explain reversal movement patterns in Atlantic salmon smolts (Salmo salar L.)

被引:3
作者
Waters, C. [1 ,2 ]
Cotter, D. [1 ]
O'Neill, R. [1 ]
Drumm, A. [1 ]
Cooney, J. [1 ]
Bond, N. [1 ]
Rogan, G. [1 ]
Maoileidigh, N. o' [1 ]
机构
[1] Marine Inst, Newport, Mayo, Ireland
[2] Marine Inst, Fisheries Ecosyst Advisory Serv FEAS, Newport F28 PF65, Mayo, Ireland
关键词
acoustic telemetry; Atlantic salmon; migration; predation; predator tag; smolt; HARBOR SEALS; ACOUSTIC TELEMETRY; ANTIPREDATOR BEHAVIOR; MIGRATORY BEHAVIOR; ESTUARINE SURVIVAL; WILD; MORTALITY; TROUT; RIVER; TEMPERATURE;
D O I
10.1111/jfb.15658
中图分类号
S9 [水产、渔业];
学科分类号
0908 ;
摘要
Acoustic telemetry has seen a rapid increase in utility and sophistication in recent years and is now used extensively to assess the behavior and survival rates of many aquatic animals, including the Atlantic salmon. As part of the salmon's complex life cycle, salmon smolts are thought to make a unidirectional migration from fresh water to the sea, which is initiated by changes in their physiology. However, some tag movement patterns do not conform with this and can be difficult to explain, particularly if the tagged fish has been eaten by a predator. This study combines the use of predator tags with machine learning techniques to understand the fate of migrating salmon smolts and thereby improve estimates for migration success. Over 3 years between 2020 and 2022, 217 salmon smolts (including wild and hatchery-reared ranched fish) were acoustically tagged and released into an embayment on the west coast of Ireland. Some tagged smolts were observed to return from the estuary back into a saline lagoon through which they had already migrated. To distinguish between the movement of a salmon smolt and that of a predator, predator tags were deployed in migrating smolts in 2021 and 2022. The addition of a temperature sensor in 2022 enabled the determination of predator type causing the returning movement. A significant number of predator tags were triggered, and the patterns of movement associated with these triggered tags were then used with two types of machine learning algorithms (hierarchical cluster analysis and random forest) to identify and validate the behavior of smolts tagged without extra sensors. Both models produced the same outputs, grouping smolts tagged with predator tags with smolts tagged without the additional sensors but showing similar movements. A mammalian predator was identified as the cause of most reversal movement, and hatchery-reared ranched smolts were found to be more likely predated upon by this predator than wild smolts within the lake and the estuary. However, overall migration success estimates were similar for both wild and hatchery-reared ranched fish. This study highlights the value of predator tags as an essential tool in the overall validation of detection data.
引用
收藏
页码:1316 / 1333
页数:18
相关论文
共 100 条
[31]   A global assessment of salmon aquaculture impacts on wild salmonids [J].
Ford, Jennifer S. ;
Myers, Ransom A. .
PLOS BIOLOGY, 2008, 6 (02) :411-417
[32]   The major threats to Atlantic salmon in Norway [J].
Forseth, Torbjorn ;
Barlaup, Bjorn T. ;
Finstad, Bengt ;
Fiske, Peder ;
Gjoaester, Harald ;
Falkegard, Morten ;
Hindar, Atle ;
Mo, Tor Atle ;
Rikardsen, Audun H. ;
Thorstad, Eva B. ;
Vollestad, Leif Asbjorn ;
Wennevik, Vidar .
ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE, 2017, 74 (06) :1496-1513
[33]   Effects of predation on telemetry-based survival estimates: insights from a study on endangered Atlantic salmon smolts [J].
Gibson, A. Jamie F. ;
Halfyard, Edmund A. ;
Bradford, Rod G. ;
Stokesbury, Michael J. W. ;
Redden, Anna M. .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES, 2015, 72 (05) :728-741
[34]   The early marine distribution of Atlantic salmon in the North-east Atlantic: A genetically informed stock-specific synthesis [J].
Gilbey, John ;
Utne, Kjell Rong ;
Wennevik, Vidar ;
Beck, Alexander Christian ;
Kausrud, Kyrre ;
Hindar, Kjetil ;
Garcia de Leaniz, Carlos ;
Cherbonnel, Corrine ;
Coughlan, Jamie ;
Cross, Tom F. ;
Dillane, Eileen ;
Ensing, Dennis ;
Garcia-Vazquez, Eva ;
Hole, Lars R. ;
Holm, Marianne ;
Holst, Jens Christian ;
Jacobsen, Jan Arge ;
Jensen, Arne J. ;
Karlsson, Sten ;
Maoileidigh, Niall O. ;
Mork, Kjell Arne ;
Nielsen, Einar Eg ;
Nottestad, Leif ;
Primmer, Craig R. ;
Prodohl, Paulo ;
Prusov, Sergey ;
Stevens, Jamie R. ;
Thomas, Katie ;
Whelan, Ken ;
McGinnity, Philip ;
Verspoor, Eric .
FISH AND FISHERIES, 2021, 22 (06) :1274-1306
[35]   Do rogue' seals exist? Implications for seal conservation in the UK [J].
Graham, I. M. ;
Harris, R. N. ;
Matejusova, I. ;
Middlemas, S. J. .
ANIMAL CONSERVATION, 2011, 14 (06) :587-598
[36]   Estuarine survival and migratory behaviour of Atlantic salmon Salmo salar smolts [J].
Halfyard, E. A. ;
Gibson, A. J. F. ;
Ruzzante, D. E. ;
Stokesbury, M. J. W. ;
Whoriskey, F. G. .
JOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY, 2012, 81 (05) :1626-1645
[37]   Evaluation of an acoustic telemetry transmitter designed to identify predation events [J].
Halfyard, Edmund A. ;
Webber, D. ;
Del Papa, J. ;
Leadley, T. ;
Kessel, S. T. ;
Colborne, S. F. ;
Fisk, A. T. .
METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2017, 8 (09) :1063-1071
[38]   Correlates of estuarine survival of Atlantic salmon postsmolts from the Southern Upland, Nova Scotia, Canada [J].
Halfyard, Edmund A. ;
Gibson, A. Jamie F. ;
Stokesbury, Michael J. W. ;
Ruzzante, Daniel E. ;
Whoriskey, Frederick G. .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES, 2013, 70 (03) :452-460
[39]   Seasonal variation in the diet of harbour seals in the south-western North Sea [J].
Hall, AJ ;
Watkins, J ;
Hammond, PS .
MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES, 1998, 170 :269-281
[40]  
Handeland SO, 1996, CAN J FISH AQUAT SCI, V53, P2673, DOI 10.1139/f96-227