Long-term changes in rearing habitat and downstream movement by juvenile sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) in an interconnected Alaska lake system |
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Authors: | P. A. H. Westley R. Hilborn T. P. Quinn G. T. Ruggerone D. E. Schindler |
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Affiliation: | Alaska Salmon Program, School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA;, Natural Resources Consultants, Inc., Seattle, WA, USA |
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Abstract: | Abstract – In some populations the phenomenon of partial migration develops where some individuals stay in a given habitat rather than move with the migratory component. Depending on the selective pressures, the individuals that stay may be larger, smaller or similar in size to those that move. Freshwater movements of juvenile sockeye salmon ( Oncorhynchus nerka Walbaum) fry vary among and within populations, and can be complex, especially in interconnected lake systems. We examined variation of movement patterns by a sockeye salmon population in an interconnected lake system during a period of rapid natural habitat change and found that fry migrating downstream were shorter, had lower body condition, and were more likely ill and moribund compared with fish remaining in the lake. However, otolith microstructure measurements indicated that emigrants did not grow significantly slower than residents prior to downstream movement. We show that patterns (i.e., demography of migrants, timing of movement) of downstream movement have changed since the 1970s, corresponding to changes in rearing habitat. Our findings parallel the results with other salmonid species and are generally consistent with the paradigm that density-dependent interactions from declining habitat availability or quality result in the downstream movement of competitively inferior individuals, although the mechanisms governing downstream migration are unclear in this system. |
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Keywords: | partial migration non-random movement sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) fry migrations density-dependent dispersal Chignik Alaska |
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