Ocean predation and mortality of adult Atlantic salmon
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Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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Predation and mortality are often difcult to estimate in the ocean, which hampers the management
and conservation of marine fshes. We used data from pop-up satellite archival tags to investigate the
ocean predation and mortality of adult Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) released from 12 rivers fowing
into the North Atlantic Ocean. Data from 156 tagged fsh revealed 22 defnite predation events (14%)
and 38 undetermined mortalities (24%). Endothermic fsh were the most common predators (n=13),
with most of these predation events occurring in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and from the Bay of Biscay
to the Irish Shelf. Predation by marine mammals, most likely large deep-diving toothed whales (n=5),
and large ectothermic fsh (n=4) were less frequent. Both the estimated predation rates (ZP) and total
mortality rates (ZM) where higher for Atlantic salmon from Canada, Ireland, and Spain (ZP=0.60–
1.32y−1, ZM =1.73–3.08y−1) than from Denmark and Norway (ZP=0–0.13y−1, ZM =0.19–1.03y−1). This
geographical variation in ocean mortality correlates with ongoing population declines, which are more
profound for southern populations, indicating that low ocean survival of adults may act as an additional
stressor to already vulnerable populations.
Lýsing
Publisher's version (útgefin grein).
Efnisorð
Ecology, Ichthyology, Vistfræði, Fiskifræði, Atlantshafslax
Citation
Strøm, J.F., Rikardsen, A.H., Campana, S.E. et al. Ocean predation and mortality of adult Atlantic salmon. Scientific Reports 9, 7890 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-44041-5