Water Stewardship Information Sources

ID 1553
Citation Roscoe, DW, Hinch, SG, Cooke, SJ and Patterson, DA. 2009. Behaviour and thermal experience of adult sockeye salmon migrating through stratified lakes near spawning grounds: The roles of reproductive and energetic states. Ecology of Freshwater Fish, doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0633.2009.00388.x
Organization UBC
URL http://www3.carleton.ca/fecpl/pdfs/EFF%20-%20Roscoe%20et%20al%202009.pdf
Abstract/Description or Keywords Little is known about physiological factors underlying
thermal behaviour in Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.). We implanted
acoustic transmitters and temperature loggers into migrating adult
sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) and nonlethally assessed their
reproductive hormone levels and energetic states immediately prior to their
passing through natal lakes en route to spawning grounds. We tested the
hypothesis that energetic and reproductive status influence
thermoregulatory and other in-lake behaviours. More reproductively
advanced females with lower levels of energy transited through cooler
temperatures compared to less mature females with high levels of energy,
possibly to reduce metabolic energy expenditure and delay final
maturation. Transit temperatures of males were not related to physiological
variables. Salmon travelled on average 13.6 km/day)1 through two lakes,
and often circled or held for more than 1 day before moving upstream,
but these behaviours were generally not related to physiological variables. salmonids, dam, temperature, spawning
Information Type article
Regional Watershed Fraser
Sub-watershed if known Anderson Lake, Gates Creek, Seton Lake
Aquifer #
Comments
Project status complete
Contact Name Scott Hinch
Contact Email [email protected]