journal article Jan 01, 1998

Life history variation and growth rate thresholds for maturity in Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar

Abstract
Based upon published and unpublished data compiled for 275 populations, we describe large-scale spatial and temporal patterns in Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar, life history and model these data to evaluate how changes to life history influence optimal growth rate thresholds for sea age at maturity. Population means (ranges in parentheses) describe the following for salmon throughout its range: smolt length = 14.8 cm (10.5-21.5 cm); smolt age = 2.91 years (1.04-5.85 years); egg-to-smolt survival = 1.5% (0.2-3.2%); grilse length = 56.8 cm (48.5-70.0 cm); sea age at maturity = 1.60 years (1.00-2.64 years); smolt-to-grilse survival = 7.4% (1.3-17.5%). Growth rate thresholds specify the length increase between the smolt and grilse stages above which reproduction after one winter at sea is favoured over later maturity. Our simulations indicated that increased growth generally favours earlier, but never delayed, maturity. Optimal growth rate thresholds for sea age at maturity are highly sensitive to survival but only moderately sensitive to fecundity, smolt size, and smolt age. Depending on an individual's growth rate at sea, early maturity is favoured by decreased smolt age or by increased smolt length, fecundity, or survival (freshwater or marine). We suggest that future Atlantic salmon life history research focus upon reaction norms and growth rate thresholds for age at maturity, demographic and genetic consequences of male parr maturation, and the origin and maintenance of coexisting anadromous and nonanadromous life history polymorphisms.
Topics

No keywords indexed for this article. Browse by subject →

References
1
[1]
Smolt St. Jean
Metrics
254
Citations
1
References
Details
Published
Jan 01, 1998
Vol/Issue
55(S1)
Pages
22-47
License
View
Cite This Article
Jeffrey A Hutchings, Megan EB Jones (1998). Life history variation and growth rate thresholds for maturity in Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 55(S1), 22-47. https://doi.org/10.1139/d98-004