Furey Nathan B, Vincent Stephen P, Hinch Scott G, Welch David W
Pacific Salmon Ecology and Conservation Laboratory, Department of Forest and Conservation Sciences, University of British ColumbiaVancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Seymour Salmonid Society, North Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
PLoS One. 2015 Oct 9;10(10):e0139269. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0139269. eCollection 2015.
Variability in animal migratory behavior is expected to influence fitness, but few empirical examples demonstrating this relationship exist. The initial marine phase in the migration of juvenile salmon smolts has been identified as a potentially critical life history stage to overall population productivity, yet how fine-scale migration routes may influence survival are unknown. Large-scale acoustic telemetry studies have estimated survival rates of outmigrant Pacific salmon smolts through the Strait of Georgia (SOG) along the British Columbian coastline to the Pacific Ocean, but these data have not been used to identify and characterize fine-scale movements. Data collected on over 850 sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) and steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss) smolts detected at an array in the Strait of Georgia in 2004-2008 and 2010-2013 were analyzed to characterize migration routes and link movements to subsequent survival at an array 250 km further along the marine migration pathway. Both species exhibited disproportionate use of the most eastern route in the Strait of Georgia (Malaspina Strait). While many smolts moved across the northern Strait of Georgia acoustic array with no indication of long-term milling or large-scale east-to-west movements, large proportions (20-40% of sockeye and 30-50% of steelhead) exhibited a different behavior, apparently moving in a westward or counterclockwise pattern. Variability in migratory behavior for both species was linked to subsequent survival through the Strait of Georgia. Survival for both species was influenced by initial east-to-west location, and sockeye were further influenced by migration timing and duration of time spent near the northern Strait of Georgia array. Westward movements result in a net transport of smolts from Malaspina Strait to the Strait of Georgia, particularly for steelhead. Counterclockwise movements may be due to the currents in this area during the time of outmigration, and the higher proportion of steelhead smolts exhibiting this counterclockwise behavior may reflect a greater exposure to wind-altered currents for the more surface-oriented steelhead. Our results provide an empirical example of how movements can affect migration survival, for which examples remain rare in movement ecology, confirming that variability in movements themselves are an important part of the migratory process.
动物迁徙行为的变异性预计会影响其适应性,但很少有实证例子能证明这种关系。幼鲑的洄游初期被认为是对总体种群生产力至关重要的潜在关键生活史阶段,然而,精细尺度的洄游路线如何影响存活率尚不清楚。大规模声学遥测研究估计了太平洋鲑幼鱼从英属哥伦比亚海岸线的佐治亚海峡(SOG)洄游到太平洋的存活率,但这些数据尚未用于识别和描述精细尺度的移动。分析了2004 - 2008年和2010 - 2013年在佐治亚海峡一个阵列中检测到的850多条红大马哈鱼(Oncorhynchus nerka)和虹鳟(Oncorhynchus mykiss)幼鱼的数据,以描述洄游路线,并将移动与沿海洋洄游路径再往250公里处的一个阵列的后续存活率联系起来。这两个物种在佐治亚海峡(马拉斯皮纳海峡)最东部的路线上使用比例不均衡。虽然许多幼鱼穿过佐治亚海峡北部的声学阵列,没有长期徘徊或大规模东西向移动的迹象,但很大比例(红大马哈鱼的20 - 40%和虹鳟的30 - 50%)表现出不同的行为,显然是以向西或逆时针模式移动。这两个物种洄游行为的变异性与随后通过佐治亚海峡的存活率相关。两个物种的存活率都受到初始东西位置的影响,红大马哈鱼还受到洄游时间和在佐治亚海峡北部阵列附近停留时间的影响。向西移动导致幼鱼从马拉斯皮纳海峡净输送到佐治亚海峡,特别是对虹鳟而言。逆时针移动可能是由于洄游期间该地区的水流,而表现出这种逆时针行为的虹鳟幼鱼比例较高,可能反映了更倾向于表层活动的虹鳟更容易受到风致水流的影响。我们的结果提供了一个实证例子,说明移动如何影响洄游存活率,在移动生态学中这种例子仍然很少,证实了移动本身的变异性是洄游过程的重要组成部分。