Predation on stocked Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)
fry
J. Nathan Henderson and Benjamin H. Letcher
Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci./J. Can. Sci. Halieut. Aquat. 60(1): 32-42 (2003)
Abstract: We
studied predator–prey interactions between juvenile Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)
and trout in three Massachusetts, U.S.A., streams and in artificial streams. We
sampled stomach contents of age-1+ and older salmon and trout (Salvelinus
fontinalis, Salmo trutta) following salmon fry stocking in the
spring of 1997 and 1998. Between 4.3 and 48.6% of the stocked fry were consumed
within the first 2 days after stocking, and total fry mortality from predation
varied from 4.3 to 60.7%. No significant differences were found between stomach
weights of predators ( without fry weight) that consumed fry and those that did
not. Artificial stream experiments testing effects of habitat complexity and
predator species on predator consumption rates revealed that consumption rates
were not different between brook (S. fontinalis) and brown (S. trutta)
trout (p=0.59). Predation rate tended to decrease as the percentage of
riffle habitat increased but the decrease was not significant (p=0.22).
Our results indicate that predation on stocked Atlantic salmon fry can be
substantial (up to 60%), appears to be short lived (2 days), and is not related
in a simple way to abiotic and biotic factors.