Autumn outmigrants in brown trout (Salmo trutta) are not a demographic dead‐end

Author:

Wynne Robert12,Kaufmann Joshka3,Coughlan Jamie12,Phillips Karl. P.4,Waters Catherine3,Finlay Ross W.123,Rogan Ger3,Poole Russell3,McGinnity Philip123,Reed Thomas E.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences University College Cork Cork Ireland

2. Environmental Research Institute University College Cork Cork Ireland

3. Marine Institute, Furnace Newport Co. Mayo Ireland

4. Canadian Rivers Institute University of New Brunswick Fredericton New Brunswick Canada

Abstract

AbstractGenetic identity analysis and PIT (passive integrated transponder) tagging were used to examine the freshwater return rates and phenotypic characteristics of n = 1791 downstream migrating juvenile Salmo trutta in the Burrishoole catchment (northwest Ireland) across the period September 2017 to December 2020. In this system, juveniles out‐migrate (move from freshwater into brackish or marine habitats) in every month of the year, with distinct seasonal peaks in spring (March through June; mostly silvered smolts) and autumn (September through December; mostly younger, unsilvered fry or parr). Both types exhibited a sex‐bias towards females, which was stronger in spring (78% females) than in autumn outmigrants (67%). Sixty‐nine returning fish were matched back to previous juvenile outmigrants, and similar return rates were found for spring outmigrants (5.0%), autumn outmigrants (3.3%) and fish that out‐migrated outside of spring or autumn (2.8%). Spring and autumn outmigrants returned at similar dates (typically mid to late July), but autumn fish were away for longer periods (median = 612 days; spring outmigrants = 104 days). Autumn outmigrants were 25% smaller than spring outmigrants at outmigration and 6% smaller on their return, and within both groups smaller/younger outmigrants spent longer away than larger/older outmigrants. Autumn outmigrants were more likely to return unsilvered as “slob” trout (84%) than spring outmigrants (31%), suggesting they make greater use of brackish habitats that might be safer, but less productive, than fully marine habitats. Nonetheless, both types also produced silvered “sea trout” (≥1+ sea‐age), implying neither is locked into a single life‐history strategy. The findings emphasise that autumn outmigrants and the transitional habitats that support their persistence should not be overlooked in salmonid management and conservation.

Funder

H2020 European Research Council

Science Foundation Ireland

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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