Authors
Thomas P Quinn, Philip McGinnity, Thomas E Reed
Publication date
2016
Journal
Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
Volume
73
Issue
7
Pages
1015-1030
Publisher
NRC Research Press
Description
In several groups of anadromous fishes, but especially the salmonids, some populations migrate from the ocean to fresh water many months prior to spawning. This “premature migration” reduces growth opportunities at sea, compels them to occupy much less productive freshwater habitats, and exposes them to extremes of flow and temperature, disease, and predation. We first review migration in salmonids and find great variation in timing patterns among and within species, relative to the timing of reproduction. Premature migration is widely distributed among species but not in all populations, and we propose two hypotheses to explain it. First, the fish may be making “the best of a bad situation” by entering early because access to suitable breeding sites is constrained seasonally by flow or temperature regimes, so they sacrifice growing opportunities at sea. Alternatively or additionally, some populations may be …
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