Return migration of adult Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) to northern Norway
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/12832Date
2017-09-18Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Ulvan, Eva Marita; Foldvik, Anders; Jensen, Arne Johan; Finstad, Bengt; Thorstad, Eva Bonsak; Rikardsen, Audun H.; Næsje, TorAbstract
The return migration of adult Atlantic salmon was investigated by analysing recaptures of individuals tagged and released as smolts in the
River Altaelva and the River Halselva using a catch per unit effort approach. Although the salmon were recaptured over a large area along the
coastline (from >1100 km south to>500 km northeast of their home rivers), the results indicated a relatively accurate homeward navigation
for most individuals. The straying rate to rivers other than the home river was 9%. Multi-sea-winter salmon returned earlier in the season
than one-sea-winter salmon, but the geographical distribution of recaptures did not differ. Recaptures were equally distributed north and
south of the home rivers, implying that salmon were arriving to the coast both north and south of their home rivers and that they may have
returned from different ocean areas. This was supported by the fact that several salmon were recaptured in both the southern and northern
parts of the North Atlantic Ocean, including at the Faroes, south coast of Greenland, Svalbard and in the Barents Sea. This study supports the
hypothesis that the coastal phase of the natal homing in migrating fish species is neither passive nor guided by currents alone.
Atlantic salmon, coastal areas, CPUE, return migration
Description
Accepted manuscript version. Published version available in ICES Journal of Marine Science (2017), 75(2), pp. 653–661