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Size Selective Predation Among Juvenile Salmonid Fishes in a British Columbia Inlet
208
Citations
2
References
1971
Year
BiologyFishery AssessmentAquatic Food SystemSalmon FryNatural SciencesFishery ScienceEvolutionary BiologyFishery ManagementField ObservationsSize Selective PredationMarine BiologyEarly Sea MortalityJuvenile Salmonid FishesBritish Columbia Inlet
Field observations suggest early sea mortality of pink (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha) and chum (O. keta) salmon fry is largely due to predation by juvenile coho (O. kisutch) salmon. A series of experiments demonstrates a strong bias toward the smaller individuals of the prey population. This results in an apparent growth rate 0.3–0.5% per day due to the biased mortality alone. With a high innate growth rate [Formula: see text], the prey are shown to "outgrow" the predator [Formula: see text], and hence become unavailable. Chums are shown to have an advantage over pinks through slightly earlier entry into the estuary and a larger initial size. The mechanism of selection used by the predator is not known from this study.
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