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Contribution of three life history types to smolt production in a Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) population
43
Citations
29
References
2009
Year
BiologyLife History TypesSmolt ProductionFishery AssessmentNatural SciencesAquacultureEvolutionary BiologyFishery ScienceOncorhynchus TshawytschaFall Parr PhenotypeFishery ManagementJuvenile PhenotypesFish FarmingChinook Salmon
The most productive juvenile life history in the Pahsimeroi River Chinook salmon ( Oncorhynchus tshawytscha ; Idaho, USA) population (in terms of smolt production) is being eliminated. Length at emigration and survival from spawning areas to Lower Granite Dam within each of three juvenile phenotypes (age-0 smolts, fall parr, age-1 smolts) were influenced by initial cohort abundance. The proportion of age-1 emigrants reaching Lower Granite Dam was dome-shaped with respect to initial cohort abundance. As initial abundance increased, higher proportions of juveniles adopted the age-1 smolt phenotype or emigrated as fall parr. The age-0 smolt phenotype had the highest relative survival, and the fall parr phenotype, the lowest. The contributions of each emigrant type to cohort smolt production varied with circumstances; hence, the full expression of phenotypic diversity is important to the study population. However, there were no records of tagged age-0 smolts surviving to return from the Pacific Ocean. Given the potential productivity of this life history, management and recovery efforts should be directed at the age-0 smolt phenotype.
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