Impact of fertilization and stocking on trophic interactions
and growth of juvenile sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka)
Asit Mazumder and Jim A. Edmundson
Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci./J. Can. Sci. Halieut. Aquat. 59(8): 1361-1373 (2002)
Abstract: Using
16 years of data on nutrients, plankton, and sockeye fry and smolts from
Packers Lake, Alaska, we test the impact of nutrients and fry stocking on the
growth and productivity of juvenile sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka).
To enhance sockeye production, this lake was fertilized (1983–1996) and stocked
annually (1987–1996) with sockeye fry. Before fertilization, the density of
sockeye fry was low (<0.20 fry·m–2), the size and biomass of Daphnia
were low, and sockeye smolts were relatively small. Before stocking, all
trophic levels responded positively to fertilization. The biomass and mean size
of Daphnia increased significantly. The average size of age-1 and age-2
smolts increased three- to four-fold. Fry stocking produced dramatic declines
in both biomass and mean length of Daphnia and in size of smolts. When
large-sized (>1 mm) Daphnia were significantly reduced in density
under heavy predation by sockeye fry, the growth of juvenile sockeye declined,
even under continued fertilization. We show that fry density and associated
food web structure are major determinants of juvenile sockeye responses to
fertilization and stocking. This study probably provides the first long-term
experimental results linking limnological and nutrient – food web concepts to
trophodynamics and productivity of juvenile sockeye salmon.