109 results on '"Henrik Baktoft"'
Search Results
52. Modelling mitigation measures for smolt migration at dammed river sections
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Ingebrigt Uglem, Hans-Petter Fjeldstad, Karl Øystein Gjelland, Henrik Baktoft, Knut Alfredsen, Marcell Szabo-Meszaros, Finn Økland, Ana T. Silva, and Torbjørn Forseth
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Atlantic salmon ,Ecology ,Ecohydraulics ,Environmental science ,Mitigation assessment ,Downstream migration ,Aquatic Science ,Water resource management ,Hydraulic modelling ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
There is no generic solution to establish safe passage of downstream migrating fish passed hydropower facilities and mitigation measures are species‐ and site‐specific. Development of solutions is thus often based on “trial and error” and modelling based approaches may significantly reduce cost and time to arrive at successful mitigation. Here we explore such an approach by combining data on fish migration and hydraulic modelling. First, we performed a positional telemetry study at a dammed section of a Norwegian river, where 100 Atlantic salmon smolts were tagged to track their downstream movement at the vicinity of a hydropower intake channel and bypass gates. An explanatory model was developed to explore mechanisms of migration route, into the intake towards the turbines or through the bypass gates. Next, flow conditions during the smolt run was numerically modelled to explore the physical environment of the tracked smolts. The joint results from the two approaches supported the general assumption that downstream migration is strongly influenced by flow patterns and showed that fish entering the study site closer to the riverbank where the intake channel is located were more likely to enter the intake due to the strong currents towards the intake. Finally, a suite of measures to guide salmon smolts past the hydropower intake were proposed based on the findings and local conditions and tested by hydraulic modelling. We found that most of the measures, which were likely candidates for field trials would most likely fail at improving safe passage, and only a rack type guiding boom was promising. The presented combination of telemetry migration data and hydraulic modelling illustrates the value of evaluation of mitigation measures prior to implementation. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License CC-BY 4.0, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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- 2019
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53. Behaviour of adult sea trout Salmo trutta that survive or die at sea
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Kim Aarestrup, Henrik Baktoft, Diego del Villar-Guerra, David Righton, and Martin Lykke Kristensen
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0106 biological sciences ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Survival ,Range (biology) ,Fishing ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,01 natural sciences ,Diving (activity) ,Mean Survival Time ,Sea trout ,Telemetry ,SDG 14 - Life Below Water ,Salmo ,Diel vertical migration ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Behavior ,biology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,biology.organism_classification ,Fishery ,Probability of survival ,human activities ,Kelt - Abstract
We tagged 125 sea trout kelts (460–925 mm) in seven Danish rivers with positively buoyant DSTs. Fifty-three (42%) tags were recovered, enabling a comparison of behaviour in kelts that survived the marine period and kelts that did not. Data revealed an estimated mean survival time at sea of 14.3 days (range 1–65 days) for fish that died at sea. Fish that did not survive had lower weight/length ratios when tagged than survivors (P = 0.005) but exhibited a similar diel diving pattern while at sea. Both surviving and non-surviving fish gradually increased diving activity and the daily visited maximum depths after sea entry, but some performed fewer dives and resided in shallower depths than others. This difference was pronounced when comparing surviving fish (most active divers) with fish caught by anglers (least active divers). The results show that the first weeks at sea are critical for kelt survival and that physical status of kelts may affect behaviour and probability of survival. The preference for shallower waters and less diving activity in some individuals indicate that coastally based fisheries and recreational angling may select against specific behavioural phenotypes which should be investigated more intensively.
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- 2019
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54. Survival of Migrating Sea Trout (Salmo trutta) Smolts During Their Passage of an Artificial Lake in a Danish Lowland Stream
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Anders Koed, Kim Aarestrup, Michael Schwinn, and Henrik Baktoft
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0106 biological sciences ,Fish migration ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Wetland ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Predation ,Fishery ,Brown trout ,Water Framework Directive ,Habitat ,Environmental Chemistry ,Environmental science ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,Salmo ,European union ,General Environmental Science ,Water Science and Technology ,media_common - Abstract
Artificial lake development is often used as a management tool to reduce nutrient runoff to coastal waters. Denmark has restored more than 10 000 ha of wetlands and lakes in the last 14 years as a consequence of ‘Action Plans for the Aquatic Environment’, which aim to meet the demands of the European Union's Water Framework Directive. Juvenile, seaward migrating salmonids are highly affected by impounded waterbodies, as they are subjected to extraordinary high mortalities due to predation and altered habitat. From 2005 to 2015, survival and migration patterns of wild brown trout (Salmo trutta) smolts were investigated by using radio, acoustic and Passive Integrated Transponder telemetry both before and after the development of an artificial lake in a small Danish lowland stream. In 2005 and 2006, before the lake developed, survival was estimated to be 100% in the river stretch where the lake later developed. In 2007 and in the period between 2009 and 2015, mean yearly survival decreased to 26%. Mean time for passing the area increased significantly after the development of the lake from 0.42 to 5.95 days. Generalized additive models were used to model the probability of a successful passage. Water temperature and discharge were key environmental factors affecting survival of the smolts during the passage of the lake. Furthermore, smolt survival was negatively correlated with condition factor. This elevated level of smolt mortality may seriously compromise self-sustaining anadromous salmonid populations when artificial lakes are developed in connection with rivers. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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- 2016
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55. Insights into the users of a citizen science platform for collecting recreational fisheries data
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Casper Gundelund, Christian Skov, Paul A. Venturelli, Robert Arlinghaus, Kieran Hyder, and Henrik Baktoft
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0106 biological sciences ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Internet privacy ,Fishing ,Population ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Aquatic Science ,01 natural sciences ,Representativeness heuristic ,Recreational fishing ,Geography ,040102 fisheries ,Citizen science ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,TRIPS architecture ,Sea trout ,business ,education ,Hobby - Abstract
Citizen science platforms, including smartphone applications, that allow anglers to report information about fishing trips and catches may be a low-cost source of data that can feed into the science and management of recreational fisheries. However, information about potential biases in these data, such as the representativeness of user characteristics and retention patterns is largely lacking. Here, we examine the characteristics and retention patterns of the users of a Danish citizen science smartphone application and website that allow anglers to report data from fishing trips. Using data from a roving creel survey of sea trout (Salmo trutta) anglers as an independent source for calibration, we found that users of the citizen science platform were younger, more specialized, and had higher catch rates than non-users. On the citizen science platform, 21% of the users were active (i.e., contributed data at least once, three months after creating an account), with an additional 22% using the platform as a source of information (e.g., catch statistics or regulations) for at least three months. These sustained users were older and ascribed a higher importance to angling as a hobby compared to those who stopped using the platform within three months. Data from similar platforms are unlikely to be representative of all anglers and, as a result, research is required to determine what issues this will bring for population extrapolations.
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- 2020
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56. Artificial lakes delay the migration of brown trout Salmo trutta smolts: a comparison of migratory behaviour in a stream and through an artificial lake
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Anders Koed, Kim Aarestrup, Michael Schwinn, and Henrik Baktoft
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0106 biological sciences ,Time Factors ,Trout ,Wetland ,STREAMS ,Aquatic Science ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Predation ,Brown trout ,Nutrient ,Rivers ,salmonids ,Salmo trutta ,Animals ,Telemetry ,lowland stream ,Salmo ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Fish migration ,geography ,ground speed ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Lake ecosystem ,biology.organism_classification ,artificial lake ,wetland ,Fishery ,Lakes ,Animal Migration - Abstract
Juvenile salmonids experience high mortality when negotiating lentic waters during their downstream migration to the sea. The development of artificial lakes and wetlands in streams has become a widely used management tool to reduce nutrient load to coastal areas. Such wetlands may threaten anadromous populations. In this study we quantify net ground speed of downstream migrating brown trout Salmo trutta smolts in equally long stream and lake sections in a Danish lowland stream and artificial lake. This was done by passive integrated transponder telemetry in 2016 and 2017. Mean net ground speed in the stream section was 36.58 km day-1 and 0.8 km day-1 in the lake section. This decrease of net ground speed through the lake may lead to prolonged exposure to predators and probably contributes to high mortalities threatening anadromous populations.
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- 2018
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57. Environmental calcium and variation in yolk sac size influence swimming performance in larval lake sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens)
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Alex J. Wall, David Deslauriers, Janet Genz, Henrik Baktoft, Jon Christian Svendsen, W. Gary Anderson, and Eva C. Enders
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0106 biological sciences ,food.ingredient ,Physiology ,Zoology ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Aquatic Science ,Calcium ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Predation ,Swimming performance ,Volitional swimming test ,food ,Yolk ,medicine ,Maternal allocation ,Acipenser ,14. Life underwater ,Yolk sac ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Larva ,biology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Life history traits ,Ichthyoplankton ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Insect Science ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Recruitment ,Lake sturgeon ,human activities - Abstract
In many animal species, performance in the early life stages strongly affects recruitment to the adult population; however, factors that influence early life history stages are often the least understood. This is particularly relevant for lake sturgeon, Acipenser fulvescens , living in areas where environmental calcium concentrations are declining, partly due to anthropogenic activity. As calcium is important for muscle contraction and fatigue resistance, declining calcium levels could constrain swimming performance. Similarly, swimming performance could be influenced by variation in yolk sac volume, because the yolk sac is likely to affect drag forces during swimming. Testing swimming performance of larval A. fulvescens reared in four different calcium treatments spanning the range of 4–132 mg l −1 [Ca 2+ ], this study found no treatment effects on the sprint swimming speed. A novel test of volitional swimming performance, however, revealed reduced swimming performance in the low calcium environment. Specifically, volitionally swimming larvae covered a shorter distance before swimming cessation in the low calcium environment compared with the other treatments. Moreover, sprint swimming speed in larvae with a large yolk sac was significantly slower than in larvae with a small yolk sac, regardless of body length variation. Thus, elevated maternal allocation (i.e. more yolk) was associated with reduced swimming performance. Data suggest that larvae in low calcium environments or with a large yolk sac exhibit reduced swimming performance and could be more susceptible to predation or premature downstream drift. Our study reveals how environmental factors and phenotypic variation influence locomotor performance in a larval fish.
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- 2018
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58. Temperature and depth preferences of adult sea trout Salmo trutta during the marine migration phase
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Martin Lykke Kristensen, David Righton, Henrik Baktoft, Diego del Villar-Guerra, and Kim Aarestrup
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0106 biological sciences ,Ecology ,biology ,Data storage tag ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Depth ,Temperature ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Oceanography ,Phase (matter) ,Telemetry ,Kelts ,Sea trout ,DST ,SDG 14 - Life Below Water ,Salmo ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
We tagged 125 sea trout kelts (length: 460-925 mm) in Danish rivers with positively buoyant, depth-and temperature-sensing data storage tags. Eight tags were recovered from fish that had completed a full marine cycle (exit and return to natal river). Mean duration of the postestuary marine cycle was 96.1 d (range: 47-142 d). The trout resided at depths of 0-3 m for 63.8% of the time and exhibited a characteristic diurnal behavioural pattern with repetitive dives deeper than 5.0 m during daytime and residency at the surface during night-time. The number of dives increased with day length, but dive duration was unaffected. Mean dive duration increased with water temperatures from 9.79 min at 5-7 degrees C to 79.8 min at 17-19 degrees C, and mean residence depth increased with water temperatures from 1.95 m at 5-7 degrees C to 10.1 m at 17-19 degrees C. The fish showed a marked response to temperatures above 17 degrees C by residing at greater depths and by discontinuing the characteristic dive/surface residency pattern for prolonged periods of time during warm periods. Temperature data indicated that the fish were generally close to land in the beginning of the marine period and had migrated into open sea during summer. Our results suggest that Danish sea trout kelts aim to optimize their growth at sea by exhibiting a characteristic foraging pattern similar to that of Atlantic salmon and by seeking temperatures within the range reported as optimal for growth in the species.
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- 2018
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59. Behavioural strategy of large perchPerca fluviatilisvaries between a mesotrophic and a hypereutrophic lake
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Lene Jacobsen, Søren Berg, Henrik Baktoft, and Christian Skov
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Perch ,biology ,Ecology ,Foraging ,Pelagic zone ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Fishery ,Crepuscular ,Habitat ,Littoral zone ,Trophic state index ,Diel vertical migration ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Behaviour of large perch Perca fluviatilis was studied in two lakes differing in environmental state i.e. mesotrophic v. hypereutrophic. A total of 20 adult perch P. fluviatilis (29-42 cm total length) in each lake were tagged with radio-transmitters, tracked and located eight times a day during six 24 h tracking periods over a year, enabling detection of differences in diel activity patterns and habitat use during summer and winter under two different environmental regimes. During summer, P. fluviatilis in the mesotrophic lake showed a distinct crepuscular activity pattern and a change from pelagic residency during daytime towards the littoral zone at night. In contrast, P. fluviatilis in the hypereutrophic lake were active during the entire diel cycle and were spread throughout the lake also during dark. During winter, crepuscular patterns of activity were seen in both lakes. Condition factor of large P. fluviatilis did not differ between the two lakes. Thus, it is suggested that P. fluviatilis in the hypereutrophic turbid lake adopted an alternative behaviour for successful foraging, being uniformly active throughout the diel cycle.
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- 2015
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60. Environmental calcium and variation in yolk sac size influence swimming performance in larval lake sturgeon (
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David, Deslauriers, Jon C, Svendsen, Janet, Genz, Alex J, Wall, Henrik, Baktoft, Eva C, Enders, and W Gary, Anderson
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Fishes ,Animals ,Calcium ,Fresh Water ,Swimming ,Yolk Sac - Abstract
In many animal species, performance in the early life stages strongly affects recruitment to the adult population; however, factors that influence early life history stages are often the least understood. This is particularly relevant for lake sturgeon
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- 2017
61. Species integrity enhanced by a predation cost to hybrids in the wild
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P Anders, Nilsson, Kaj, Hulthén, Ben B, Chapman, Lars-Anders, Hansson, Jakob, Brodersen, Henrik, Baktoft, Jerker, Vinterstare, Christer, Brönmark, and Christian, Skov
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fish ,Evolutionary Biology ,Cyprinidae ,diversity ,Birds ,cormorant ,Lakes ,predator–prey ,Predatory Behavior ,evolution ,Animals ,Hybridization, Genetic - Abstract
Species integrity can be challenged, and even eroded, if closely related species can hybridize and produce fertile offspring of comparable fitness to that of parental species. The maintenance of newly diverged or closely related species therefore hinges on the establishment and effectiveness of pre- and/or post-zygotic reproductive barriers. Ecological selection, including predation, is often presumed to contribute to reduced hybrid fitness, but field evidence for a predation cost to hybridization remains elusive. Here we provide proof-of-concept for predation on hybrids being a postzygotic barrier to gene flow in the wild. Cyprinid fishes commonly produce fertile, viable hybrid offspring and therefore make excellent study organisms to investigate ecological costs to hybrids. We electronically tagged two freshwater cyprinid fish species (roach Rutilus rutilus and bream Abramis brama) and their hybrids in 2005. Tagged fish were returned to their lake of origin, exposing them to natural predation risk from apex avian predators (great cormorant, Phalacrocorax carbo). Scanning for regurgitated tags under cormorant roosts 3–4 years later identified cormorant-killed individual fish and allowed us to directly test for a predation cost to hybrids in the wild. Hybrid individuals were found significantly more susceptible to cormorant predation than individuals from either parental species. Such ecological selection against hybrids contributes to species integrity, and can enhance species diversification.
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- 2017
62. Pike (Esox lucius L.) on the edge: consistent individual movement patterns in transitional waters of the western Baltic
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Dorte Bekkevold, Christian Skov, Anders Koed, Kim Aarestrup, Lene Jacobsen, Niels Jepsen, Henrik Baktoft, and Søren Berg
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0106 biological sciences ,Movement patterns ,Spawning ,Population ,Aquatic Science ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Brackish water pike ,Condition factor ,Environmental Science(all) ,Aquatic science ,education ,Esox ,Pike ,computer.programming_language ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Brackish water ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,fungi ,Genetic data ,biology.organism_classification ,Pollution ,Salinity tolerance ,Salinity ,Fishery ,computer - Abstract
Pike in the western Baltic Sea live on the edge of their salinity tolerance. Under physiologically challenging conditions, organism may respond by moving to environmentally more benign areas during critical periods, such as during spawning. We hypothesised that pike in a brackish lagoon (8–10 ppt salinity) would perform spawning- and feeding-related movements between areas with different salinity regimes. Twenty-two pike were caught prior to spawning, tagged with acoustic transmitters, and their movements were tracked for 18 months. Pike showed two main patterns of movements that were consistent within individuals across two years. Whereas some individuals stayed in the lagoon year-round, most pike left the lagoon for longer periods after spawning and returned to the lagoon prior to following year’s spawning season. We found no evidence that probability of moving out of the lagoon co-varied with either length or condition factor. Despite the fact that the lagoon’s salinity is close to the reported upper limit for pike egg development, results indicated that all pike spawned in the lagoon. Correspondingly, genetic data showed that all fish belonged to the same reproductive population unit. Movement patterns thus appear to reflect individual variation in home-range and/or resource optimisation following ideal free principles.
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- 2017
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63. Sex identification and PIT-tagging: tools and prospects for studying intersexual differences in freshwater fishes
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Kaj Hulthén, Jakob Brodersen, Lars-Anders Hansson, Christian Skov, Ben B. Chapman, Per Anders Nilsson, Christer Brönmark, and Henrik Baktoft
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biology ,Range (biology) ,Ecology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Zoology ,Phenotypic trait ,Aquatic Science ,Natural field ,biology.organism_classification ,Reproductive period ,Rutilus ,Reproduction ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Body condition ,Sex ratio ,media_common - Abstract
This study evaluated a technique to allow the long-term monitoring of individual fishes of known sex in the wild using sex confirmation in close proximity to the reproductive period combined with individual tagging. Hundreds of partially migratory roach Rutilus rutilus were tagged with passive integrated transponders (PIT) following sex determination in spring and various performance measures were compared with fish tagged outside the reproductive period in autumn. Short-term survival was >95% for R. rutilus sexed and tagged under natural field conditions. Total length (LT ) did not affect the probability of survival within the size range tagged (119-280 mm), nor were there differences in timing of migration the following season between individuals sexed and tagged in spring and individuals tagged in autumn (i.e. outside the reproductive period). Also, a similar per cent of R. rutilus sexed and tagged in spring and tagged in autumn migrated the following season (34·5 and 34·7%). Moreover, long-term recapture data revealed no significant differences in body condition between R. rutilus individuals sexed and tagged in spring, individuals tagged in autumn and unmanipulated individuals. The observed sex ratio of recaptured fish did not differ from the expected values of equal recapture rates between males and females. Hence, there is no observable evidence for an adverse effect of tagging close to the reproductive period and therefore this method is suitable for studying intersexual differences and other phenotypic traits temporarily expressed during reproduction at the individual level in fishes. (Less)
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- 2014
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64. Comparison of the riverine and early marine migration behaviour and survival of wild and hatchery-reared sea trout Salmo trutta smolts
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Kim Aarestrup, Henrik Baktoft, Eva B. Thorstad, Anders Koed, and Diego del Villar-Guerra
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Release site ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,Fjord ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,Nocturnal ,biology.organism_classification ,Hatchery ,Fishery ,Brown trout ,Habitat ,Sea trout ,Salmo ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The seaward migration of wild (n = 61) and hatchery-reared (n = 46) sea trout smolts was investigated in the Danish River Gudenaa and Randers Fjord (17.3 and 28.6 km stretch, respectively) using acoustic telemetry. Their riverine and early marine migration was monitored by deploying automatic listening stations (ALS) at 4 locations in the river and fjord. Migration speeds were approximately 3 to 11 times faster in the river than in the early marine environment. Hatchery-reared smolts migrated faster than wild smolts, but the difference was small, especially compared with the large differences in migration speeds among habitats. There was no difference in the diurnal activity pattern between wild and hatchery-reared smolts. Both the riverine and early marine migration activity were primarily nocturnal, although some individuals were also recorded by the ALSs during the daytime. The survival of the wild smolts from release in the river to the outermost marine ALS site, 46 km from the release site, was 1.8 and 2.9 times higher than that of the hatchery-reared smolts in the 2 study years, respectively. Overall, survival from release to the outermost ALS site was 79% for wild and 39% for hatchery-reared smolts. Since the lower survival of the hatchery-reared compared with the wild smolts could not be explained by differ- ences in migration speeds or diurnal migration patterns, behavioural differences on a smaller scale than those recorded in the present study may explain the difference in survival.
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- 2014
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65. Effects of angling and manual handling on pike behaviour investigated by high-resolution positional telemetry
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Søren Berg, Anders Koed, Henrik Baktoft, Mikkel Boel, Christian Skov, Kim Aarestrup, Lene Jacobsen, Martin Wæver Pedersen, and Jon Christian Svendsen
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Manual handling ,Ecology ,biology ,Fishing ,High resolution ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Fishery ,Telemetry ,computer ,Esox ,Lower activity ,Pike ,computer.programming_language ,Catch and release - Abstract
Human disturbances such as angling and manual handling may have long-term effects on the behaviour of pike, Esox lucius L., an ecologically important species. Using continuous high-resolution positional telemetry, this study compared the swimming activity of handled and unhandled pike in a small lake. Pike pre-equipped with acoustic transmitters were angled and exposed to a handling protocol including measurements of length and mass. Pike not recaptured constituted an unhandled control group. Results demonstrated that the handling protocol caused temperature-dependent changes in pike activity, with higher temperatures leading to lower activity of the recaptured pike. The effects, however, were transitory and not detectable after 48-h post-release. These findings indicate that pike are relatively resilient to handling and quickly resume pre-handling activity.
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- 2013
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66. Can sea trout Salmo trutta compromise successful eradication of Gyrodactylus salaris by hiding from CFT Legumin (rotenone) treatments?
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Eva B. Thorstad, Finn Økland, S. Aune, Henrik Baktoft, Jan Grimsrud Davidsen, and Audun H. Rikardsen
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Fish migration ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Estuary ,Fjord ,Rotenone ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Fishery ,Brown trout ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Gyrodactylus salaris ,Legumin ,Salmo ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
In this study, 34 anadromous brown trout (sea trout) Salmo trutta were equipped with acoustic transmitters in order to examine whether they performed avoidance behaviour in response to a CFT Legumin (rotenone) treatment in the Norwegian River Vefsna. Migratory behaviour of the S. trutta was monitored by use of 15 automatic listening stations and manual tracking in the lower part of the river, in the estuary and in the fjord. None of the studied S. trutta survived the rotenone treatment and no indications of successful avoidance behaviour were observed.
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- 2013
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67. De naturlige bestande af ørreder i danske ørredvandløb målt i forhold til ørredindekset DFFVø
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Jan Nielsen, Anders Koed, and Henrik Baktoft
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- 2016
68. Investigating the phenology of seaward migration of juvenile brown trout (Salmo trutta) in two European populations
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Emily Winter, Kim Aarestrup, Martyn C. Lucas, Jeroen S. Tummers, and Henrik Baktoft
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0106 biological sciences ,Fish migration ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,Phenology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,animal diseases ,SDG 10 - Reduced Inequalities ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Trout ,Brown trout ,Spring (hydrology) ,parasitic diseases ,Juvenile ,Salmo ,Smoltification - Abstract
Recent evidence supports the existence of a downstream autumn-migratory phenotype in juvenile anadromous brown trout (Salmo trutta), however the precise timing, extent and ecological significance of such behaviour remains ambiguous. We investigated the phenology of downstream migration of wild juvenile trout using passive integrated transponder (PIT) telemetry over an eight-month period in two European rivers; the River Deerness, north-east England, and the River Villestrup, Denmark. The incidence of autumn–winter seaward migration was greater in the Deerness than the Villestrup, with at least 46% of migrating juveniles detected prior to spring smoltification in the Deerness. Timing of migration was strongly regulated by factors associated with river discharge in both systems. While autumn and spring downstream migrants did not differ in size at the time of tagging in either system, evidence that spring migrants were of better condition, travelled faster (autumn: 11.0 km day−1; spring: 24.3 km day−1) and were more likely to leave the Deerness suggests that autumn and spring migrant conspecifics respond to different behavioural motivations. Further investigation into the sex of autumn migrant juveniles, as well as the temporal and geographical variability in the incidence and fitness consequences of autumn emigration by juvenile trout would be beneficial.
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- 2016
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69. Seasonal and diel effects on the activity of northern pike studied by high-resolution positional telemetry
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Kim Aarestrup, Anders Koed, Lene Jacobsen, Søren Berg, Niels Jepsen, Mikkel Boel, Christian Skov, Henrik Baktoft, and Jon Christian Svendsen
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Ecology ,biology ,Lake ecosystem ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Food web ,Temperate climate ,Ecosystem ,computer ,Diel vertical migration ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Esox ,Pike ,computer.programming_language ,Trophic level - Abstract
Temperate lakes can be ice covered for several months each year, yet little is known about the behaviour and activity of the fish during the cold season. As northern pike represents the top of the food web in many northern temperate lakes and may structure the ecosystem both directly and indirectly, a detailed understanding of the behaviour of this species during winter is important. We continuously monitored the activity of adult northern pike (Esox lucius) in a small temperate lake from late summer to winter for two consecutive years using an automatic acoustic positional telemetry system. Four subsample periods representing different temperature regimes from each year were chosen for further investigation. The results revealed that pike activity was similar between seasons. In all periods, a distinct diel pattern, showing increased activity during day as compared to night, was evident. Our findings indicate that the fish component of temperate lentic ecosystems can be more active during the cold season than previously assumed. This may have implications for the structuring effect of pike on the lower trophic levels.
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- 2012
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70. Sizing up your enemy: individual predation vulnerability predicts migratory probability
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Jakob Brodersen, P. Anders Nilsson, Lars-Anders Hansson, Henrik Baktoft, Christian Skov, Ben B. Chapman, and Christer Brönmark
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Food Chain ,Range (biology) ,Denmark ,Population ,Cyprinidae ,Vulnerability ,Zoology ,Biology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Predation ,Food chain ,Animals ,education ,Biological sciences ,Research Articles ,General Environmental Science ,education.field_of_study ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Ecology ,Genetic Variation ,General Medicine ,Individual level ,biology.organism_classification ,Freshwater fish ,Animal Migration ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences - Abstract
Partial migration, in which a fraction of a population migrate and the rest remain resident, occurs in an extensive range of species and can have powerful ecological consequences. The question of what drives differences in individual migratory tendency is a contentious one. It has been shown that the timing of partial migration is based upon a trade-off between seasonal fluctuations in predation risk and growth potential. Phenotypic variation in either individual predation risk or growth potential should thus mediate the strength of the trade-off and ultimately predict patterns of partial migration at the individual level (i.e. which individuals migrate and which remain resident). We provide cross-population empirical support for the importance of one component of this model—individual predation risk—in predicting partial migration in wild populations of bream Abramis brama , a freshwater fish. Smaller, high-risk individuals migrate with a higher probability than larger, low-risk individuals, and we suggest that predation risk maintains size-dependent partial migration in this system.
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- 2010
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71. Escaping peril: perceived predation risk affects migratory propensity
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Ben B. Chapman, Kaj Hulthén, Lars-Anders Hansson, Jerker Vinterstare, Christer Brönmark, Jakob Brodersen, Christian Skov, P. Anders Nilsson, and Henrik Baktoft
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Electronic tags ,Population Density ,biology ,Ecology ,Population Dynamics ,Cyprinidae ,biology.organism_classification ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Population density ,Predation ,Risk perception ,Habitat ,Predatory Behavior ,Esocidae ,%22">Fish ,Animals ,Animal Behaviour ,Animal Migration ,Seasons ,Rutilus ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Predator - Abstract
Although migratory plasticity is increasingly documented, the ecological drivers of plasticity are not well understood. Predation risk can influence migratory dynamics, but whether seasonal migrants can adjust their migratory behaviour according to perceived risk is unknown. We used electronic tags to record the migration of individual roach ( Rutilus rutilus ), a partially migratory fish, in the wild following exposure to manipulation of direct (predator presence/absence) and indirect (high/low roach density) perceived predation risk in experimental mesocosms. Following exposure, we released fish in their lake summer habitat and monitored individual migration to connected streams over an entire season. Individuals exposed to increased perceived direct predation risk (i.e. a live predator) showed a higher migratory propensity but no change in migratory timing, while indirect risk (i.e. roach density) affected timing but not propensity showing that elevated risk carried over to alter migratory behaviour in the wild. Our key finding demonstrates predator-driven migratory plasticity, highlighting the powerful role of predation risk for migratory decision-making and dynamics.
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- 2015
72. Phenotypic variation in metabolism and morphology correlating with animal swimming activity in the wild: relevance for the OCLTT (oxygen- and capacity-limitation of thermal tolerance), allocation and performance models
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Jon Christian Svendsen, Kim Aarestrup, Henrik Baktoft, Mikkel Boel, Lene Jacobsen, Søren Berg, Christian Skov, Anders Koed, and Niels Jepsen
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030110 physiology ,0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Physiology ,Zoology ,chemistry.chemical_element ,macromolecular substances ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Oxygen ,03 medical and health sciences ,Respirometry ,OCLTT hypothesis ,morphology ,SDG 13 - Climate Action ,14. Life underwater ,Aerobic metabolic scope ,Research Articles ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,Perch ,biology ,Ecology ,Ecological Modeling ,performance and allocation models ,Metabolism ,fineness ratio ,standard metabolic rate ,biology.organism_classification ,Phenotype ,Variation (linguistics) ,chemistry ,Themed Issue Article: Conservation Physiology of Marine Fishes ,Ectotherm ,Metabolic rate - Abstract
Combining physiological and morphological measures in the laboratory with registrations of detailed measures of field activity, we tested the hypothesis that individual activity patterns correlate with individual metabolism and morphology as proposed by several conceptual models. We found no evidence indicating an effect of metabolism, whereas morphology correlated with several activity measures., Ongoing climate change is affecting animal physiology in many parts of the world. Using metabolism, the oxygen- and capacity-limitation of thermal tolerance (OCLTT) hypothesis provides a tool to predict the responses of ectothermic animals to variation in temperature, oxygen availability and pH in the aquatic environment. The hypothesis remains controversial, however, and has been questioned in several studies. A positive relationship between aerobic metabolic scope and animal activity would be consistent with the OCLTT but has rarely been tested. Moreover, the performance model and the allocation model predict positive and negative relationships, respectively, between standard metabolic rate and activity. Finally, animal activity could be affected by individual morphology because of covariation with cost of transport. Therefore, we hypothesized that individual variation in activity is correlated with variation in metabolism and morphology. To test this prediction, we captured 23 wild European perch (Perca fluviatilis) in a lake, tagged them with telemetry transmitters, measured standard and maximal metabolic rates, aerobic metabolic scope and fineness ratio and returned the fish to the lake to quantify individual in situ activity levels. Metabolic rates were measured using intermittent flow respirometry, whereas the activity assay involved high-resolution telemetry providing positions every 30 s over 12 days. We found no correlation between individual metabolic traits and activity, whereas individual fineness ratio correlated with activity. Independent of body length, and consistent with physics theory, slender fish maintained faster mean and maximal swimming speeds, but this variation did not result in a larger area (in square metres) explored per 24 h. Testing assumptions and predictions of recent conceptual models, our study indicates that individual metabolism is not a strong determinant of animal activity, in contrast to individual morphology, which is correlated with in situ activity patterns.
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- 2015
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73. Performance assessment of two whole-lake acoustic positional telemetry systems - Is reality mining of free-ranging aquatic animals technologically possible?
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Jon Christian Svendsen, David March Morla, Petr Zajicek, Christian Skov, Martin Wæver Pedersen, Henrik Baktoft, Thomas Klefoth, Robert Arlinghaus, Shinnosuke Nakayama, Lene Jacobsen, and German Federal Environmental Foundation
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0106 biological sciences ,Aquatic Organisms ,Accuracy and precision ,Science ,Biology ,01 natural sciences ,Structural complexity ,JUVENILE ATLANTIC COD ,TRACKING ,FISH ,Telemetry ,Environmental monitoring ,Animals ,ACTIVITY PATTERNS ,14. Life underwater ,Ecosystem ,Remote sensing ,Biotelemetry ,BIOTELEMETRY ,BASS MICROPTERUS-SALMOIDES ,LARGEMOUTH BASS ,Multidisciplinary ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Reality mining ,COD GADUS-MORHUA ,Acoustics ,NATURAL-ENVIRONMENT ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,15. Life on land ,Fishery ,Lakes ,Data quality ,040102 fisheries ,Medicine ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Scale (map) ,MULTIDISCIPLINARY ,BEHAVIOR ,Research Article ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Acoustic positional telemetry systems (APTs) represent a novel approach to study the behaviour of free ranging aquatic animals in the wild at unprecedented detail. System manufactures promise remarkably high temporal and spatial resolution. However, the performance of APTs has rarely been rigorously tested at the level of entire ecosystems. Moreover, the effect of habitat structure on system performance has only been poorly documented. Two APTs were deployed to cover two small lakes and a series of standardized stationary tests were conducted to assess system performance. Furthermore, a number of tow tests were conducted to simulate moving fish. Based on these data, we quantified system performance in terms of data yield, accuracy and precision as a function of structural complexity in relation to vegetation. Mean data yield of the two systems was 40%(Lake1) and 60%(Lake2). Average system accuracy (acc) and precision (prec) were Lake1: acc = 3.1 m, prec = 1.1 m; Lake2: acc = 1.0 m, prec = 0.2 m. System performance was negatively affected by structural complexity, i.e., open water habitats yielded far better performance than structurally complex vegetated habitats. Post-processing greatly improved data quality, and sub-meter accuracy and precision were, on average, regularly achieved in Lake2 but remained the exception in the larger and structurally more complex Lake1. Moving transmitters were tracked well by both systems. Whereas overestimation of moved distance is inevitable for stationary transmitters due to accumulation of small tracking errors, moving transmitters can result in both over- and underestimation of distances depending on circumstances. Both deployed APTs were capable of providing high resolution positional data at the scale of entire lakes and are suitable systems to mine the reality of free ranging fish in their natural environment. This opens important opportunities to advance several fields of study such as movement ecology and animal social networks in the wild. It is recommended that thorough performance tests are conducted in any study utilizing APTs. The APTs tested here appear best suited for studies in structurally simple ecosystems or for studying pelagic species. In such situations, the data quality provided by the APTs is exceptionally high., Funding was provided by the Danish Rod and Net Fish License Funds to HB, the Deutsche Bundesstiftung Umwelt (DBU, No AZ 20007/924) through a scholarship to TK, through the project Adaptfish by the Gottfried-Wilhelm-Leibniz- Community to RA (www.adaptfish.igb-berlin.de), through the project Besatzfisch by the Federal Ministry for Education and Research in the Program
- Published
- 2015
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74. Survival and progression rates of anadromous brown trout kelts Salmo trutta during downstream migration in freshwater and at sea
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Anders Koed, Jon Christian Svendsen, Johan Höjesjö, Henrik Baktoft, Kim Aarestrup, and Eva B. Thorstad
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Fishery ,Brown trout ,Fish migration ,Ecology ,Downstream (manufacturing) ,SDG 14 - Life Below Water ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,Salmo ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The marine migration of post-spawning anadromous fish remains poorly understood. The present study examined survival and progression rates of anadromous brown trout Salmo trutta L. after spawning (kelts) during downriver, fjord, and sea migration. Kelts (n = 49) were captured in the Danish River Gudenaa, tagged with acoustic transmitters and subsequently recordedby automatic receivers. Kelts spent on average 25 d moving down the 45 km river and through the brackish fjord. The fish entered the Kattegat Sea between 14 April and 30 May. Eighteen of the 49 kelts disappeared in the river and fjord during outward migration, likely due to mortality. Survival was not significantly related to gill Na+/K+-ATPase activity, suggesting that physiological adaptationto saltwater may be less critical for adults compared to juveniles (smolts). Of the 31 fish that entered the Kattegat Sea, 45% survived and returned to the fjord. The duration of the entire marine migration, from leaving to entering the river, was on average 163 d. The fish returned from the Kattegat Sea to the fjord between 22 July and 21 October. Upon return, the fish spent 1−90 d passing through Randers Fjord, with most individuals completing the reach within 4 d, suggesting that the kelts spent limited time foraging after returning to the fjord. The total survival during the entire marine migration, including the fjord, was a minimum of 29%. Our study provides data that are important for management of anadromous brown trout, and the high survival highlights that kelts may represent a valuable resource for both population reproduction and recreational fisheries
- Published
- 2015
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75. RevFisk - et projekt som kvantificerer stenrevs (et lavtliggende stenrev i den fotiske zone og et dybereliggende stenrev i den afotiske zone) betydning for fisk
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Claus Stenberg, Mads Christoffersen, Kim Aastrup, Mikael van Deurs, Josianne Støttrup, Anders Nielsen, Niels Gerner Andersen, Patrizio Mariani, Henrik Baktoft, Martin Wæver Pedersen, Karsten Dahl, Steffen Lundsteen, Peter Anton Upadhyay Stæhr, Michael Bo Rasmussen, Christian Mohn, Flemming Møhlenberg, Flemming Thorbjørn Hansen, Thomas Uhrenholt, Anne Lise Middelboe, and Xerxes Rohinton Mandviwalla
- Abstract
Viden om stenrev (Naturtypen 1170) og deres betydning for gyde- og opvækstområder for fisk er i dag sparsom. Der er ikke tidligere gennemført undersøgelser, der har dokumenteret, hvordan et stenrevs størrelse, struktur og placering spiller ind på dets betydning som gyde- og opvækstområde for fisk. Det er derfor i dag ikke muligt kvantitativt at redegøre for stenrevs betydning for fiskeressourcerne eller udarbejde målrettede natur-genopretningsplaner for stenrev med det formål at genskabe gyde- og opvækstområder for fisk. Det vil Projektet RevFisk forsøge at råde bod på.Centrale spørgsmål i projektet er: Hvilke fiskearter findes på revet? Hvornår er fiskene der? Hvilke fisk er nøglearter på revet? Hvad er faunaudbuddet? Hvad spiser nøglefiskearterne? Hvor stor del af fiskenes føde stammer fra stenrevet? Hvad er rovfiskenes adfærd og opholdstider på stenrev? Er der inter- og intraspecifik konkurrence mellem nøglefiskearterne? Hvor hurtigt vokser fiskene? Hvad er spredningsvejene for fisk til og fra et givent stenrev? Hvordan forvaltes stenrev nationalt og internationalt?Målet med projektet er at opbygge viden om marine stenrevs biologiske funktion for fisk og deres betydning som gyde og opvækstområde. Viden indsamlet i løbet af projektet vil implementeres til at udvikle forvaltningsværktøjer, der dels kan anvendes ved etablering af nye samt reetablerede stenrev og dels til at forvalte eksisterende stenrev.Der vil udvikles modelværktøjer, der kvantificerer stenrevs betydning for fisk som funktion af stenrevets tilstand, størrelse og dybdeplacering. Stenrevs betydning som donor til det omkringliggende område belyses igennem driftsanalyser af spredningsveje. Denne vidensopbygning vil blive brugt til at udvikle guidelines i forhold til design, form og placering ved naturgenopretning af stenrev.
- Published
- 2015
76. Causes of mortality of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) and brown trout (Salmo trutta) smolts in a restored river and its estuary
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Anders Koed, Henrik Baktoft, and Brian Daniel Bak
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geography ,education.field_of_study ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Floodplain ,Ecology ,Population ,Estuary ,biology.organism_classification ,Fishery ,Brown trout ,Predatory fish ,River mouth ,Environmental Chemistry ,Salmo ,education ,Salmonidae ,General Environmental Science ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
During October 2000 to August 2002, the River Skjern Nature Project was implemented by removing dykes and re-meandering 20.5 km of the lower canalized river. As a consequence the length of the river stretch increased to 23 km. A lake of 250 ha developed in the river valley 5 km upstream from the river mouth because of subsiding soils caused by reclamation and drainage since the 1960s. Using radiotelemetry, the mortality of wild Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) and brown trout (Salmo trutta) smolts in the River Skjern and its estuary was investigated prior to and after the implementation of the project. Altogether, 77 Atlantic salmon and 66 brown trout smolts were caught, tagged and released in the river upstream of the restoration project during the spring of 2000 and 2002. The in-river smolt mortality was more than double in 2002 for both Atlantic salmon and brown trout compared with 2000. This was primarily due to bird predation in 2002 which was not observed in 2000. The in-river bird predation in 2002 was mediated by the new lake, which quickly became an important bird rest area. Estuarine mortality mainly caused by cormorants (Phalacrocorax carbo sinensis) differed significantly between species, but was high for both Atlantic salmon (39%) and brown trout (12%) in both years of investigation. The aggregated smolt mortality in the river and in the estuary (48%) may threaten an indigenous self-sustaining Atlantic salmon population in the River Skjern. When planning river restoration projects, caution should be used, especially where permanently flooded floodplains (lakes) develop due to subsiding soil. In situations where rivers pass directly through newly developed lakes, migratory species such as Atlantic salmon and brown trout may be severely affected due to increased exposure to predation from predatory fish and birds. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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- 2005
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77. The physiological basis of the migration continuum in brown trout (Salmo trutta)
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Christian Skov, Anders Koed, Steffen S. Madsen, Kim Aarestrup, Hans Malte, Jon Christian Svendsen, Mikkel Boel, Torben Larsen, and Henrik Baktoft
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LIFE-HISTORY VARIATION ,Physiology ,Trout ,PARR-SMOLT TRANSFORMATION ,Denmark ,Nutritional Status ,Biochemistry ,NICHE SHIFT ,NA+,K+-ATPASE ACTIVITY ,Condition factor ,Brown trout ,LIPID-METABOLISM ,Rivers ,Animals ,Salmo ,CHAR SALVELINUS-ALPINUS ,ARCTIC CHARR ,Fish migration ,biology ,Ecology ,SEASONAL-VARIATIONS ,biology.organism_classification ,STEELHEAD TROUT ,Taxon ,Sympatric speciation ,Body Composition ,Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Animal Migration ,JUVENILE ATLANTIC SALMON ,Energy Metabolism - Abstract
Partial migration is common in many animal taxa; however, the physiological variation underpinning migration strategies remains poorly understood. Among salmonid fishes, brown trout (Salmo trutta) is one of the species that exhibits the most complex variation in sympatric migration strategies, expressed as a migration continuum, ranging from residency to anadromy. In looking at brown trout, our objective with this study was to test the hypothesis that variation in migration strategies is underpinned by physiological variation. Prior to migration, physiological samples were taken from fish in the stream and then released at the capture site. Using telemetry, we subsequently classified fish as resident, short-distance migrants (potamodromous), or long-distance migrants (potentially anadromous). Our results revealed that fish belonging to the resident strategy differed from those exhibiting any of the two migratory strategies. Gill Na,K-ATPase activity, condition factor, and indicators of nutritional status suggested that trout from the two migratory strategies were smoltified and energetically depleted before leaving the stream, compared to those in the resident strategy. The trout belonging to the two migratory strategies were generally similar; however, lower triacylglycerides levels in the short-distance migrants indicated that they were more lipid depleted prior to migration compared with the long-distance migrants. In the context of migration cost, we suggest that additional lipid depletion makes migrants more inclined to terminate migration at the first given feeding opportunity, whereas individuals that are less lipid depleted will migrate farther. Collectively, our data suggest that the energetic state of individual fish provides a possible mechanism underpinning the migration continuum in brown trout.
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- 2014
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78. Cormorant predation on PIT-tagged lake fish
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Henrik Baktoft, Christian Skov, Stig Pedersen, Niels Jepsen, Anders Koed, and Teunis Jansen
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POPULATION-DYNAMICS ,species annual predation rate ,YELLOW PERCH ,PHALACROCORAX-CARBO-SINENSIS ,Predation ,Abramis brama ,STOCKS ,species mortality ,PERCH PERCA-FLUVIATILIS ,lcsh:Environmental sciences ,Water Science and Technology ,Trophic level ,SDG 15 - Life on Land ,lcsh:GE1-350 ,Freshwater Ecology ,Perch ,education.field_of_study ,PIT tags ,Ecology ,biology ,Common bream ,lcsh:Geography. Anthropology. Recreation ,Cormorant ,LIMNOLOGY ,GREAT CORMORANTS ,species ecosystem function ,Rutilus rutilus ,Rutilus ,Passive Integrated Transponder ,Lake Viborg Denmark, Europe Palearctic region ,Aves Vertebrata Chordata Animalia (Animals, Birds, Chordates, Nonhuman Vertebrates, Vertebrates) - Pelecaniformes [85550] cormorant common ,Population ,Aquatic Science ,DIET ,biology.animal ,environmental biology - Animal [07508, Ecology] ,RIVER ,ESTUARY ,avian predation, Perca fluviatilis, Abramis brama, Rutilus rutilus, PIT tags, mortality ,education ,lcsh:Physical geography ,avian predation ,recreational angling ,Lake ecosystem ,Pisces Vertebrata Chordata Animalia (Animals, Chordates, Fish, Nonhuman Vertebrates, Vertebrates) - Osteichthyes [85206] Perca fluviatilis species perch common Rutilus rutilus species roach common Abramis brama species common bream common ,biology.organism_classification ,mortality ,Perca fluviatilis ,Fishery ,SIZE ,lcsh:G ,species trophic interaction ,environmental biology - Limnology [07514, Ecology] ,Ecology, Environmental Sciences ,lcsh:GB3-5030 - Abstract
The present study use data from recovered PIT (Passive Integrated Transponder) tags to explore species- and size-specific annual predation rates by cormorants on three common lacustrine fishes (size range 120-367 mm) in a European lake; roach (Rutilus rutilus), common bream (Abramis brama) and perch (Perca fluviatilis). In addition, we quantify the level of age/size truncation that cormorant predation could introduce in a population of perch, an important fish for recreational angling as well as for trophic interactions and ecosystem function in European lakes. Based on three years of PIT tagging of fish in lake Viborg and subsequent recoveries of PIT tags from nearby cormorant roosting and breeding sites, we show that cormorants are major predators of roach, bream and perch within the size groups we investigated and for all species larger individuals had higher predation rates. Perch appear to be the most vulnerable of the three species and based on a comparison with mortality estimates from lakes without significant avian predation, this study suggest that predation from cormorants can induce age/size truncation in lake Viborg, leaving very few larger perch in the lake. This truncation reduces the likelihood of anglers catching a large perch and may also influence lower trophic levels in the lake and thus turbidity as large piscivorous perch often play an important structuring role in lake ecosystem functioning.
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- 2014
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79. A foraging cost of migration for a partially migratory cyprinid fish
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Lars-Anders Hansson, Jakob Brodersen, Christer Brönmark, Christian Skov, Anders Eriksen, Kaj Hulthén, Ben B. Chapman, Peter Grønkjær, P. Anders Nilsson, and Henrik Baktoft
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0106 biological sciences ,Range (biology) ,Denmark ,Population Dynamics ,01 natural sciences ,Predation ,Behavioral Ecology ,Food chain ,Biologiska vetenskaper ,Freshwater Ecology ,Multidisciplinary ,Ecology ,Geography ,biology ,Ecosystems Agroecology ,Biological Sciences ,6. Clean water ,Community Ecology ,Habitat ,Freshwater fish ,590 Animals (Zoology) ,Medicine ,Seasons ,Rutilus ,Research Article ,Food Chain ,Ecological Metrics ,Science ,Foraging ,Cyprinidae ,010603 evolutionary biology ,Ecological Economics ,Animals ,14. Life underwater ,Population Growth ,Biology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Feeding Behavior ,biology.organism_classification ,Gastrointestinal Tract ,Lakes ,Energy Flow ,Evolutionary Ecology ,570 Life sciences ,Animal Migration ,Population Ecology ,Agroecology - Abstract
Migration has evolved as a strategy to maximise individual fitness in response to seasonally changing ecological and environmental conditions. However, migration can also incur costs, and quantifying these costs can provide important clues to the ultimate ecological forces that underpin migratory behaviour. A key emerging model to explain migration in many systems posits that migration is driven by seasonal changes to a predation/growth potential (p/g) trade-off that a wide range of animals face. In this study we assess a key assumption of this model for a common cyprinid partial migrant, the roach Rutilus rutilus, which migrates from shallow lakes to streams during winter. By sampling fish from stream and lake habitats in the autumn and spring and measuring their stomach fullness and diet composition, we tested if migrating roach pay a cost of reduced foraging when migrating. Resident fish had fuller stomachs containing more high quality prey items than migrant fish. Hence, we document a feeding cost to migration in roach, which adds additional support for the validity of the p/g model of migration in freshwater systems.
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- 2013
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80. Visibility conditions and diel period affect small-scale spatio-temporal behaviour of pike Esox lucius in the absence of prey and conspecifics
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E.M. Rokkjær, Christian Skov, Mikkel Boel, Henrik Baktoft, P. A. Nilsson, Lene Jacobsen, T. Clausen, and Kristian Meier
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Periodicity ,biology ,Ecology ,Period (gene) ,Photoperiod ,Fresh Water ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Piscivore ,Predation ,Habitat ,Predatory Behavior ,Esocidae ,Animals ,computer ,Predator ,Diel vertical migration ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Esox ,Ecosystem ,Pike ,computer.programming_language - Abstract
Pike Esox lucius in the absence of prey and conspecifics were shown to have the highest habitat-change activity during dusk and to decrease preference for complex habitats in turbid water. As the behaviours indicate routine responses in the absence of behavioural interactions, E. lucius spatio-temporal distributions should be directly affected and thereby more easily assessed and avoided by prey, with potential consequences for encounter rates.
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- 2012
81. Linking individual behaviour and migration success in Salmo salar smolts approaching a water withdrawal site: implications for management
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Michael Deacon, Anders Koed, Uffe Høgsbro Thygesen, K. Fiona Cubitt, Henrik Baktoft, R. Scott McKinley, Hans Malte, Kim Aarestrup, and Jon Christian Svendsen
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Fish migration ,biology ,business.industry ,Fish farming ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Water withdrawal ,Fishery ,Habitat ,Aquaculture ,Swimming behaviour ,Environmental science ,Salmo ,business ,Salmonidae - Abstract
Seaward migration of immature salmonids (smolts) may be associated with severe mortality in anthro- pogenically altered channels. Few studies however, have identified distinct behaviours that lead to exposure to adverse habitats or even unsuccessful migration. This study used high resolution telemetry to map migration routes of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) smolts approaching a water withdrawal zone associated with an aquaculture facility in a lowland river. Individual smolts were tagged with an acoustic transmitter and released upstream of the water withdrawal zone. A trap was installed downstream of the water withdrawal zone. The trap captured all smolts that passed the water with- drawal zone. The tracking results confirmed previous studies on Pacific salmon showing that Atlantic salmon smolts may perform milling behaviours (i.e. upstream excursions and circular swimming behaviour) in anthropogenically al- tered channels. Non-milling and milling smolts were compared. Smolts performing milling behaviours covered a larger area (m 2 ) and experienced an increased probability of entering the water withdrawal zone, considered an adverse habi- tat. Finally, smolts were identified as either passing (67%) or non-passing (33%) the water withdrawal zone based on the recapture data from the trap. In total, 20% of the non-passing smolts entered the aquaculture facility. Several be- havioural traits differed between the remaining (80%) non-passing smolts and the passing smolts. In particular, time spent near the water withdrawal zone correlated negatively with the probability of passage. These links between indi- vidual behaviours and exposure to adverse habitats and passage probability may be applied to improve management of salmonid populations.
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- 2011
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82. Migration confers survival benefits against avian predators for partially migratory freshwater fish
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P. Anders Nilsson, Christer Brönmark, Kaj Hulthén, Jakob Brodersen, Lars-Anders Hansson, Henrik Baktoft, Christian Skov, and Ben B. Chapman
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Time Factors ,Denmark ,Population Dynamics ,Cyprinidae ,STREAMS ,Biology ,Freshwater Biology ,Predation ,Birds ,Species Specificity ,Risk Factors ,biology.animal ,Animals ,Ecology ,Cormorant ,biology.organism_classification ,Survival Analysis ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Fishery ,Lakes ,Freshwater biology ,Predatory Behavior ,Linear Models ,Freshwater fish ,%22">Fish ,Animal Migration ,Animal Behaviour ,Seasons ,Rutilus ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences - Abstract
The importance of predation risk in shaping patterns of animal migration is not well studied, mostly owing to difficulties in accurately quantifying predation risk for migratory versus resident individuals. Here, we present data from an extensive field study, which shows that migration in a freshwater fish (roach, Rutilus rutilus ) that commonly migrates from lakes to streams during winter confers a significant survival benefit with respect to bird (cormorant, Phalacrocorax carbo spp.) predation. We tagged over 2000 individual fish in two Scandinavian lakes over 4 years and monitored migratory behaviour using passive telemetry. Next, we calculated the predation vulnerability of fish with differing migration strategies, by recovering data from passive integrated transponder tags of fish eaten by cormorants at communal roosts close to the lakes. We show that fish can reduce their predation risk from cormorants by migrating into streams, and that probability of being preyed upon by cormorants is positively related to the time individuals spend in the lake during winter. Our data add to the growing body of evidence that highlights the importance of predation for migratory dynamics, and, to our knowledge, is one of the first studies to directly quantify a predator avoidance benefit to migrants in the field.
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- 2013
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83. The first smolt reef in the world: how do we get sustainable populations of brown trout?
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Pedro Juan Gil García, Deinhammer, Killian P., Henrik Baktoft, Marie Hartlev Frausing, and Jon Christian Svendsen
84. Disturbance by human activities on fish individual behaviour in a small lake
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Lene Jacobsen, Henrik Baktoft, Søren Berg, Niels Jepsen, Christian Skov, and Kim Aarestrup
85. The European lobster fishery in the Limfjorden
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Pedro Freitas, Henrik Baktoft, Mads Christoffersen, Josefine Egekvist, Feekings, Jordan P., Rikke Petri Frandsen, Alexandros Kokkalis, Martin Lykke Kristensen, Martin Hage Larsen, Schiønning, Mette K., Josianne Støttrup, Jon Christian Svendsen, and Jens Kjerulf Petersen
86. Skader skarven søerne
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Christian Skov, Niels Jepsen, Henrik Baktoft, and Anders Koed
87. Phenotypic variation in metabolism and morphology correlating with fish movements in the wild: a study combining respirometry and telemetry
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Jon Christian Svendsen, Henrik Baktoft, Christian Skov, Kim Aarestrup, Anders Koed, and Lene Jacobsen
88. Can metabolic properties explain variation in individual behaviour?
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Henrik Baktoft, Lene Jacobsen, Mikkel Boel Sørensen, Martin Wæver Pedersen, Niels Jepsen, Anders Koed, Christian Skov, Søren Berg, Kim Aarestrup, and Jon Christian Svendsen
89. Ormstrup Sø: fremtidens restaureringer
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Martin Søndergaard, Kasper Reitzel, Christian Skov, Henrik Baktoft, Anders Nielsen, Thomas Alexander Davidson, Theis Kragh, and Martin Lykke Kristensen
90. RevFisk – et projekt som kvantificerer stenrevs (et lavtliggende stenrev i den fotiske zone og et dybere liggende stenrev i den afotiske zone) betydning for fisk
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Claus Stenberg, Mads Christoffersen, Kim Aarestrup, Mikael van Deurs, Josianne Støttrup, Anders Nielsen, Niels Andersen, Patrizio Mariani, Henrik Baktoft, Martin Wæver Pedersen, Karsten Dahl, Steffen Lundsteen, Peter Stæhr, Michael Bo Rasmussen, Christian Mohn, Flemming Møhlenberg, Flemming Thorbjørn Hansen, Thomas Uhrenholt, Anne Lise Middelboe, and Xerxes Rohinton Mandviwalla
91. Marine survival in wild sea trout (Salmo trutta) post-smolts. Why little fish matter!
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Diego Del Villar, Kim Aarestrup, Henrik Baktoft, Martin Hage Larsen, and Anders Koed
92. New insights in pike behaviour using 2D/3D telemetry
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Henrik Baktoft, Lene Jacobsen, Christian Skov, Kim Aarestrup, Jon Christian Svendsen, Søren Berg, Martin Wæver Pedersen, and Anders Koed
93. Effekten af rekreative aktiviteter på fiskenes adfærd i en lille sø
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Lene Jacobsen, Henrik Baktoft, Søren Berg, Niels Jepsen, Christian Skov, and Kim Aarestrup
94. New insights in pike behaviour
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Henrik Baktoft, Lene Jacobsen, Søren Berg, Kim Aarestrup, Christian Skov, and Jon Christian Svendsen
95. Hvad fiskene laver i søen - døgnet rundt
- Author
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Lene Jacobsen, Henrik Baktoft, Kim Aarestrup, Søren Berg, and Christian Skov
96. Vandplanerne - forslag til fiskeindeks for ørred
- Author
-
Stig Pedersen, Niels Jepsen, Jan Nielsen, Henrik Baktoft, Esben Kristensen, and Anders Koed
97. Skarvprædation på søfisk: Et indblik fra Viborg Søerne
- Author
-
Christian Skov, Niels Jepsen, Henrik Baktoft, Stig Pedersen, and Anders Koed
98. KYSTFISK III. Population connectivity of cod and plaice in Danish coastal waters
- Author
-
Patrizio Mariani, Jakob Hemmer-Hansen, Alan Le Moan, Henrik Baktoft, Peter Munk, Asbjørn Christensen, David Munk Zino, Aurelia Pereira Gabellini, Margit Eero, Alexandros Kokkalis, Anna Rindorf, and Josianne Støttrup
99. Improving knowledge base for management of cod stocks in the Baltic Sea and in the Kattegat
- Author
-
Margit Eero, Christoffer Moesgaard Albertsen, Henrik Baktoft, Casper Willestofte Berg, Rikke Bucholtz, Jakob Hemmer-Hansen, Bastian Huwer, Karin Hüssy, Kasper Kristensen, Maria Krüger-Johnsen, Friedrich Wilhelm Köster, Aurore Maureaud, Julie Josias Nielsen, Marie Plambech Ryberg, Marie Storr-Paulsen, Jonna Tomkiewicz, and Morten Vinther
100. Rovfisk på menuen
- Author
-
Christian Skov, Niels Jepsen, Henrik Baktoft, and Anders Koed
Catalog
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