Abstract
Atlantic salmon have a variable life cycle. In good growing conditions, underyearling fish may metamorphose into the migratory smolt phase during their second spring, or delay at least a further year. The strategy adopted by particular fish appears to become fixed during their first summer. This paper examines whether either feeding efficiency or dominance in mid-summer correlates with the life-history strategy adopted. Eighty fish were individually marked and their feeding efficiency ( = mean handling time for food items) and dominance rank measured under laboratory conditions in mid-July. Growth rates of the fish were then monitored over the next three months, until developmental strategies became apparent. Discriminant and logistic regression analyses revealed that both dominance rank and size attained by July were independent, significant predictors of future developmental pattern (the age at metamorphosis being correctly predicted on the basis of rank and size in 84% of cases) whereas feeding efficiency had no effect. Thus fish that were dominant or larger two months after first feeding or both had a greater probability of migrating after only one year in freshwater than those more subordinate or smaller or both.
Reference35 articles.
1. The interaction of size and experience in dominance relationships of juvenile steelhead trout (Salmo gairdneri);Abbott J. C.;Behaviour,1985
2. Adams C. E. & Thorpe J. E. 1989 Photoperiod and temperature influences on growth in juvenile Atlantic salmon Salmo salar. In biotechnology in progress (ed. N. De Pauw E. Jaspers H. Ackefors & N. Wilkins). Bredene Belgium: European Aquaculture Society. (In the press.)
3. Anon. 1986 SPSSX user's guide 2nd edn. Chicago: SPSS.
4. Social Rank and Food Access in Red Deer Stags
5. Callers and satellites in the natterjack toad: evolutionarily stable decision rules
Cited by
269 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献