4.4 Article

Marine depth use of sea trout Salmo trutta in fjord areas of central Norway

Journal

JOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY
Volume 91, Issue 5, Pages 1268-1283

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jfb.13463

Keywords

acoustic telemetry; brown trout; marine migration; migratory behaviour; swimming depth

Funding

  1. Hemne Municipality
  2. County Governor of Sor-Trondelag
  3. Sor-Trondelag County Authority
  4. Norwegian Environment Agency
  5. Lake Rovatnet Landowners Association
  6. Tronder Energi AS
  7. Aqua Gen AS
  8. Dalhousie University (Ocean Tracking Network)
  9. Norwegian Institute for Nature Research
  10. DTU Aqua
  11. Uit the Arctic University of Norway
  12. NTNU University Museum

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The vertical behaviour of 44 veteran sea trout Salmo trutta (275-580 mm) in different marine fjord habitats (estuary, pelagic, near shore with and without steep cliffs) was documented during May-February by acoustic telemetry. The swimming depth of S. trutta was influenced by habitat, time of day (day v. night), season, seawater temperature and the body length at the time of tagging. Mean swimming depth during May-September was 17 m (individual means ranged from 04 to 64 m). Hence, S. trutta were generally surface oriented, but performed dives down to 24 m. Mean swimming depth in May-September was deeper in the near-shore habitats with or without steep cliffs (20 m and 25 m, respectively) than in the pelagic areas (12 m). May-September mean swimming depth in all habitats was slightly deeper during day (19 m) than at night (12 m), confirming that S. trutta conducted small-scale diel vertical movements. During summer, S. trutta residing in near-shore habitat progressively moved deeper over the period May (mean 11 m) to August (mean 40 m) and then reoccupied shallower areas (mean 23 m) during September. In winter (November and February), individuals residing in the innermost part of the fjords were found at similar average depths as they occupied during the summer (mean 13 m). The swimming depths of S. trutta coincide with the previously known surface orientation of salmon lice Lepeophtheirus salmonis. Combined with previous studies on horizontal use of S. trutta, this study illustrates how S. trutta utilize marine water bodies commonly influenced by anthropogenic factors such as aquaculture, harbours and marine constructions, marine renewable energy production or other human activity. This suggests that the marine behaviour of S. trutta and its susceptibility to coastal anthropogenic factors should be considered in marine planning processes.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available