Tracking the invasive and euryhaline pikeperch Sander lucioperca in the lower River Thames using acoustic telemetry indicates no movements into areas of relatively high salinity

Author:

Stakėnas Saulius12ORCID,Gregory Stephen D.34ORCID,Britton J. Robert4ORCID,Marsh Jessica E.345ORCID,Tarkan Ali Serhan467ORCID,Zięba Grzegorz6ORCID,Wesley Keith J.8,Copp Gordon H.1469ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Salmon & Freshwater Team Centre for Environment, Fisheries & Aquaculture Science Lowestoft UK

2. Department of Freshwater Ecology Institute of Ecology of Vilnius University Vilnius Lithuania

3. The Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science Weymouth UK

4. Department of Life and Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Science and Technology Bournemouth University Poole UK

5. Salmon and Trout Research Centre, Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust Wareham UK

6. Department of Ecology and Vertebrate Zoology, Faculty of Biology and Environmental Protection University of Lodz Lodz Poland

7. Department of Basic Sciences, Faculty of Fisheries Muğla Sıtkı Koçman University Muğla Türkiye

8. Bedwell Fisheries Services & Fish Farms Welham Green UK

9. Environmental & Life Sciences Graduate Programme Trent University Peterborough Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractNative to Central and Eastern Europe, the euryhaline pikeperch Sander lucioperca can acclimatize to elevated salinity levels (e.g., up to 30‰), but it remains unknown whether their invasive populations use this ability to inhabit and/or disperse through brackish waters, such as estuaries and inshore areas. To test whether invasive pikeperch show a propensity to move into areas of relatively high salinity, their spatial use and movement patterns (e.g., home range, distances moved, and movement rates) were assessed using acoustic telemetry in the upper River Thames estuary, southeast England. Analyses revealed that individual pikeperch were capable of moving relatively long distances in a short time (e.g., speeds up to 70 m min−1), with movement patterns associated more with tidal state and elevation at the water surface (both assumed to relate to changes in salinity) than diurnal changes. There were no recorded movements of any pikeperch into the more saline, downstream waters of the estuary where salinity levels were recorded to over 40‰, with the mean salinity in the most downstream area where pikeperch were detected being 1.39‰ (range of logger: 1.22–1.71). The results suggest that these pikeperch did not use high salinity waters when less saline waters were available, and thus the risk that they will use to move through high salinity areas to expand their invasive range appears low. Accordingly, efforts to minimize risks of the further dispersal of invasive pikeperch populations can focus on control and containment programmes within fresh waters.

Funder

Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, UK Government

European Commission

Natural Environment Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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