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Download fileEffects of post-capture ventilation assistance and elevated water temperature on sockeye salmon in a simulated capture-and-release experiment
journal contribution
posted on 2013-01-01, 00:00 authored by K A Robinson, S G Hinch, M K Gale, Timothy ClarkTimothy Clark, S M Wilson, M R Donaldson, A P Farrell, S J Cooke, D A PattersonThe live release of wild adult Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.) following capture is a management tactic often used in commercial, aboriginal, and recreational fisheries. Fisheries capture and handling can be both exhausting and stressful to fish, which can limit their ability to swim and survive after release. As a result, researchers have assessed methods intended to improve post-release survival by assisting the flow of water over the gills of fish prior to release. Such approaches use recovery bags or boxes that direct water over the gills of restrained fish. This study evaluated a method of assisting ventilation that mimics one often employed by recreational anglers (i.e. holding fish facing into a current). Under laboratory conditions, wild Fraser River sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) either received manual ventilation assistance for 1 min using a jet of water focused at the mouth or were left to recover unassisted following a capture-and-release simulation. A control group consisted of fish that were not exposed to the simulation or ventilation assistance. The experiment was conducted at 16 and 21°C, average and peak summer water temperatures for the Fraser River, and fish survival was monitored for 33 days. At 21°C, all fish perished within 3 days after treatment in all experimental groups, highlighting the consequences of handling adult sockeye salmon during elevated migration temperatures. Survival was higher at 16°C, with fish surviving on average 15-20 days after treatment. At 16°C, the capture-and-release simulation and ventilation assistance did not affect the survival of males; however, female survival was poor after the ventilation assistance compared with the unassisted and control groups. Our results suggest that the method of ventilation assistance tested in this study may not enhance the post-release survival of adult Fraser River sockeye salmon migrating in fresh water.
History
Journal
Conservation physiologyVolume
1Issue
1Pagination
1 - 10Publisher
Oxford University PressLocation
Oxford, Eng.Publisher DOI
ISSN
2051-1434Language
engPublication classification
C Journal article; C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2013, The AuthorUsage metrics
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Categories
Keywords
Exhaustive exercisefacilitated recoveryfisheriesrevivalstresssurvivalScience & TechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicineBiodiversity ConservationEcologyEnvironmental SciencesPhysiologyBiodiversity & ConservationEnvironmental Sciences & EcologyREPEAT SWIMMING PERFORMANCETROUT ONCORHYNCHUS-MYKISSLOWER FRASER-RIVERRAINBOW-TROUTMIGRATION MORTALITYOXYGEN-CONSUMPTIONMETABOLIC RECOVERYFINAL MATURATIONPACIFIC SALMON