| Literature DB >> 27352823 |
M Newton1, J Barry1, J A Dodd1, M C Lucas2, P Boylan3, C E Adams1.
Abstract
Mortality rates of wild Atlantic salmon Salmo salar smolts implanted with acoustic transmitters were assessed to determine if mortality was size dependent. The routinely accepted, but widely debated, '2% transmitter mass: body mass' rule in biotelemetry was tested by extending the transmitter burden up to 12·7% of body mass in small [mean fork length (LF ) 138·3 mm, range 115-168 mm] downstream migrating S. salar smolts. Over the short timescale of emigration (range 11·9-44·5 days) through the lower river and estuary, mortality was not related to S. salar size, nor was a relationship found between mortality probability and transmitter mass: body mass or transmitter length: LF ratios. This study provides further evidence that smolt migration studies can deviate from the '2% rule' of thumb, to more appropriate study-specific measures, which enables the use of fishes representative of the body size in natural populations without undue effects.Entities:
Keywords: biotelemetry; migration; tag burden; transmitter effects
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27352823 DOI: 10.1111/jfb.13066
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fish Biol ISSN: 0022-1112 Impact factor: 2.051