Cross-tributary analysis of parr to smolt recruitment of
Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)
Kevin G. Whalen, Donna L. Parrish, Martha E. Mather, and James R. McMenemy
Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci./J. Can. Sci. Halieut. Aquat. 57(8): 1607-1616 (2000)
Abstract: We used estimates of Atlantic salmon
(Salmo salar) parr and smolt density, estimated in three tributaries of
the West River, Vermont, U.S.A., to determine (i) if smolt recruitment
is density dependent or independent of parr density, (ii) if the
proportion of parr migrating as smolts and cohort survival differ among
tributaries, and (iii) the effect of parr maturity on smolt production
and recruitment variability. We found that parr to smolt recruitment was best
described with a linear function providing no evidence for density dependence
in the recruitment dynamics of parr and smolts at the tributary scale. The
proportion of age-1 parr recruiting to age-2 smolts did not systematically
differ among tributaries or years (overall mean ± 95% CL: 18 ± 11%,
range=9-37%), and mean age-1 to age-2 survival ranged less than twofold among
tributaries (27-46%) and was independent of cohort density. Survival of age-1 mature
(39%) and immature (33%) parr was similar, but probability of smolting for
mature parr (0.21) was threefold less than for immature parr (0.76).
Quantifying smolt recruitment pathways involving parr maturation helped
elucidate the population-level effect of parr maturation on smolt production
and recruitment variability.