Validation and implications of a growth model for brown trout, Salmo trutta, using long-term data from a small stream in north-west England
Authored by J M Elliott
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2427.2009.02258.x
Sponsors:
European Union
United Kingdom Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
Freshwater Biological Association
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
P>1. The objectives were: (i) to check the validity of a new growth
model; (ii) to examine the relationship between population density and
both mean mass and mean growth rate and (iii) to discover if
compensatory growth occurred. First (0+) and second (1+) year-old
juvenile sea-trout were sampled by electrofishing at the beginning and
end of the summer from 1967 to 2000. Additional samples were taken in
some years in winter and in the critical period for survival when the
fry first emerge from the gravel. The trout left the stream as
pre-smolts in May, soon after their second birthday.
2. A growth model (Elliott, Hurley \& Fryer, 1995) estimated the mean
mass of the trout over the 2 years spent in fresh water. The date and
mean mass at the start of the growth period were defined as the median
date for fry emerging from the gravel and their mean mass at emergence, both being estimated from individual-based models (Elliott \& Hurley, 1998a, b).
3. The variation in mean mass among year-classes was small for
newly-emerged fry (CV = 6.2\%), maximum at the start of the first summer
of the life cycle (CV = 38.1\%), and then decreased gradually for
successive life-stages to a low value for pre-smolts (CV = 10.8\%). Mean
mass was not related to population density and, therefore, mean growth
rate was density-independent. Growth in the first, but not the second, winter of the life cycle was lower than model prediction, but when it
was assumed in the model that there was no first-winter growth, there
was good agreement in most year-classes between model estimated values
and observed mean mass. Exceptions were that mean masses and growth
rates for 0+ trout after four summer droughts were lower than expected, but compensatory growth followed, so that observed and expected masses
were similar for 1+ trout.
4. Pre-smolt mean mass on 30 April measured total growth achieved in the
freshwater phase of the life cycle. This was significantly related to
mean mass at the end of the first and second summers of the life cycle, but not to the emergence date and mean mass of emerging fry.
5. These juvenile sea-trout were growing at their maximum potential in
most year-classes but when this was not achieved, compensatory growth
soon restored their mass to values expected from the model. This ensured
a low variation in the mean mass of pre-smolts just before they migrated
to the sea. However, the latter mass was higher in more recent
year-classes (1987-98) than in previous ones (1967-86), demonstrating
the effect of slightly higher stream temperature. This study has shown
the importance of developing realistic growth models in order to detect
departure from maximum potential growth, and the more subtle effects of
temperature change, possibly due to the effects of climate change.
Tags
Density-dependent growth
Population regulation
Latitudinal variation
Lake district stream
Juvenile atlantic
salmon
Different life-stages
Compensatory
growth
Sea-trout
Thermal performance
Arctic
charr