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Factors Influencing Rearing Success of Atlantic Salmon Stocked as Fry and Parr in Lake Ontario Tributaries
Author(s) -
Stanfield Les,
Jones Michael L.
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
north american journal of fisheries management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.587
H-Index - 72
eISSN - 1548-8675
pISSN - 0275-5947
DOI - 10.1577/m01-181
Subject(s) - salmo , stocking , fishery , rainbow trout , tributary , habitat , hatchery , biology , juvenile , environmental science , fish <actinopterygii> , ecology , geography , cartography
Abstract From 1995 to 1999, we evaluated the suitability of various stream conditions for rearing juvenile Atlantic salmon Salmo salar in the Lake Ontario watershed. As part of an ongoing initiative to reestablish this species in Lake Ontario, fry and parr were stocked into sites with contrasting amounts of rock and wood cover, fine materials in the substrate, and densities of rainbow trout Onchorhynchus mykiss . Resulting Atlantic salmon densities exceeded the target density of five age‐0 fall fingerlings/100 m 2 at 52% of the site‐years surveyed. Atlantic salmon stocked as parr (fed in hatchery before stocking; annual mean weights, 0.45‐0.95 g) consistently had greater survival to the age‐0 fall fingerling stage than those stocked as fry (not fed before stocking, annual mean weights, 0.13‐0.20 g). The percentage of rock cover at a site was the best predictor of high densities of fall fingerling Atlantic salmon for the parr stocking strategy. For Atlantic salmon stocked as fry, the density of rainbow trout was the most influential variable, exhibiting a negative correlation, whereas the percentage of rock cover was also influential in discerning Atlantic salmon densities in a positive way. Our study also found that densities of fall fingerling Atlantic salmon at sites with high densities of rainbow trout (>1.5/m 2 ) were greater than at sites where rainbow trout were present at lower densities, suggesting that habitat influenced the outcome of competitive interactions. High‐quality habitat supported high densities of both species. The results of this study indicate that both above and below barriers in the north shore tributaries of Lake Ontario, sites exist with conditions suitable for rearing Atlantic salmon from the fry to the fall fingerling stage.