Pr�dation exerc�e par le chabot (Cottus Gobio L.) sur l'alevin de truite commune (Salmo trutta L.): taille maximale de capture des alevins par les chabots

Hydrobiologia ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 122 (3) ◽  
pp. 267-270 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Gaudin
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Răzvan Voicu ◽  
Lawrence G. Dominguez

AbstractLongitudinal connectivity restoration of watercourses is a major duty for scientists (biologists, hydro engineers, chemists etc.) that, by the means of technical exchange via conferences, projects, workshops, universities, and institutions demonstrate the major importance of a natural (non-anthropic) function of the lotic ecosystems. On the Ialomiţa River, the discharge sills located downstream from Padina chalet block the migration of some fish species, such as the brown trout (Salmo trutta) and the bullhead (Cottus gobio), prohibiting access to foraging areas and springs. Water Framework Directive 60/2000 / EC provides a legal framework for restoring “good status” of longitudinal and lateral connectivity of watercourses. Our proposed solution I can be applied to other discharge sills and dams sized between 3m and 6m high, and, where feasible can utilize existing power sources of some discharge sills. Solution II’s concepts allow the dimples inside the concrete plate to serve as a rest and recovery area for migratory species. Such benefits that ensure upstream/downstream fish migration while allowing discharge management to continue is unattainable in conventional systems. After solution II is applied the discharge sill does not lose any baseline characteristics while maintaining the original hydro-technical design objective, flood dissipation.


Parasitology ◽  
1968 ◽  
Vol 58 (2) ◽  
pp. 307-324 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. B. E. Awachie

The life-cycles of the two species ofCrepidostomumoccurring in a stream in North Wales are investigated. Both species share the same arthropod and definitive hosts, viz.Gammarus pulexandSalmo trutta, respectively, but have different molluscan hosts, viz.:Lymnaea peregraforC. metoecusandPisidium casertanumforC. farionis.C. metoecusandC. farionishave annual cycles, hence periodicity of occurrence in their hosts. InC. metoecusthe dynamics of occurrence in the three hosts are correlated. The inverse relationship inG. pulexandS. truttaas well as the existence of a time-lag of 3–4 months between the establishment of this worm inG. pulexand inS. truttaare discussed.Neither premunition nor age-resistance occurs in the parasitization ofS. truttaandG. pulexbyC. metoecus. The increase in the rate and degree of infestation with the age and length of fish, except in the oldest and longest group, is shown to be due to trophic factors.C. metoecusis more abundant and widely distributed in the stream thanC. farionis. This fact is associated with the occurrence of their molluscan hosts.Experimental observations were made on the stages in the life-history ofC. metoecus, including the mode of emergence of the cercaria, invasion of shrimps and encystment, as well as development of the metacercariae inG. pulex.More cercariae are shed by day and at higher temperatures, and they live for about 5 days at 8 °C. The metacercaria undergoes considerable development before becoming infective.C. metoecusdoes extensive damage toL. peregra, has no observed ill-effect on trout, and apparently affects the life-span of shrimps adversely only in cases of very heavy infestations.The non-parasitization ofCottus gobioby the two flukes is probably due to the prevailing ecological factors.My thanks are due to Professor H. B. N. Hynes and Dr J. C. Chubb for many helpful criticisms at all stages of this study; to Miss Joan Venn for helping with the sampling programme; and the Commonwealth Scholarship Commission in the United Kingdom for financial support.


2004 ◽  
Vol 61 (9) ◽  
pp. 1565-1581 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elisabeth I Meyer ◽  
Rainer Poepperl

Trophic interactions and cycling of matter within the community in a soft-water mountain stream were analyzed on the basis of a compartment food-web model. The model describes (i) the structure of the food web, quantifying biomass, production, and consumption of individual elements as well as of the entire system, and (ii) the flow of matter between compartments as well as trophic levels. Detritus and primary producers sustain a broad variety of invertebrate consumers. Fishes are the top predators; sculpin (Cottus gobio) and a compartment consisting of brown trout (Salmo trutta) and rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) are at the highest trophic level. Heterotrophic microorganisms (227.1 g dry mass (DW)·m–2·year–1) and aufwuchs algae (150.1 g DW·m–2·year–1) have the highest production. Secondary production of fishes and macroinvertebrates amounts to 2.56 and 19.9 g DW·m–2·year–1, respectively. Total consumption amounts to 1136.41 g DW·m–2·year–1. Main flows occur between the lower trophic levels. Food intake is greatest for microorganisms and Ephemeroptera. A relatively high fraction of invertebrate production is consumed by predators. For 10 of 19 compartments, over 95% of production is used as food by other organisms. Transfer efficiencies are generally low (<10%). A large proportion of matter transfer occurs at the lower discrete trophic levels of the stream.


2016 ◽  
Vol 75 (s2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Pietro Volta ◽  
Norman D. Yan ◽  
John M. Gunn

<p>Since 1926, the fishes in Lake Orta, one of Italy’s deepest natural lakes, were heavily damaged by profundal hypoxia and acidification linked to oxidation of ammonia from industrial effluents and by industrial metal pollution. Of the original 28 fish species, only perch survived the lake’s contamination. Recently, the water quality of the lake has been largely restored by reductions in pollutant inputs, and a massive liming intervention. These interventions restored fish habitat, but it is unclear whether the recent fish reintroductions were successful, and the present status of the fish community is unknown.  Here we reviewed the history of the Lake Orta fish assemblage. Using an extensive 2014 sampling campaign, we compared the present fish community to both its pre-pollution composition and to the assemblages of nearby un-polluted, but otherwise similar lakes, Lake Mergozzo and Lake Maggiore. While nearshore fish density now appears normal in lake Orta, the open water community remains impoverished both in numbers and in species. Epilimnetic and hypolimnetic benthic nets were dominated by perch and roach in all the three lakes, but the catch of pelagic nets differed among lakes. Perch (<em>Perca fluviatilis)</em>, rudd (<em>Scardinius erythrophthalmus)</em> and brown trout (<em>Salmo trutta</em>) dominated in Lake Orta while shad (<em>Alosa fallax lacustris</em>) and coregonids (<em>Coregonus</em> spp.) were dominant in the open waters of the other two lakes, but missing from Lake Orta.  Many fully or partially migratory species, including marble trout (<em>Salmo trutta marmoratus)</em>, eel (<em>Anguilla Anguilla)</em> and barbel (<em>Barbus plebejus)</em> were also missing from Lake Orta, a consequence of their initial extirpation and blocked re-colonization routes along the River Strona. In comparison with both pre-pollution and contemporary reference data, the fish community of Lake Orta has not been rehabilitated. The recovery of the littoral community is complete, but cold water species such as burbot (<em>Lota lota), </em>Arctic charr (<em>Salvelinus alpinus)</em> and bullhead (<em>Cottus gobio)</em> are still lacking, as are the pelagic zooplanktivores European whitefish (<em>Coregonus lavaretus)</em> and shad, which dominate offshore communities in the reference lakes, as they did a century ago in Lake Orta.  To propose priorities for fish community rehabilitation in Lake Orta, we categorized the conservation, ecological and fishing values of each missing fish species in the lake, and evaluated the cost and probability of success of the needed intervention for each species. This analysis indicated that rehabilitation of shad and European whitefish should receive highest priority.</p>


1966 ◽  
Vol 40 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. B. E. Awachie

Of the three species of fish which live in Afon Terrig (Salmo trutta, Cottus gobio and Nemacheilus barbatula), only S. trutta was infected by Cyathocephalus truncatus. The parasite has a clear annual cycle and hence a periodicity of occurrence in the brown trout.No age resistance of fish to infection by C. truncatus is found. The increase of incidence with age among l+—3+ year-old fish and decrease in the older age groups are correlated with the variation in the food and feeding habits of trout with age.


2005 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 163-173 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Pont ◽  
B Hugueny ◽  
T Oberdorff

To test the hypothesis that different species have similar responses to local and regional environmental constraints, we modelled the occurrences of 13 species using a data set of 413 undisturbed river reaches. Three environmental descriptors were considered at the local scale (river slope, river width, and upstream drainage area) and three at the regional scale (mean annual and mean range air temperature and basin unit). Using multiple logistic regression modelling techniques, we correctly predicted the occurrence of 11 of the 13 retained species. The hierarchical partitioning analysis that we used allowed us to jointly consider all possible models in a multiple regression setting and to evaluate the independent explanatory power of each of our five environmental variables. We reject the hypothesis of a common species response to the environmental constraints. Species inhabiting upstream river reaches (bullhead (Cottus gobio), brown trout (Salmo trutta), minnow (Phoxinus phoxinus), and stone loach (Barbatula barbatula)) are more sensitive to basin unit. All species representative of downstream areas (barbel (Barbus barbus), dace (Leuciscus leuciscus), chub (Leuciscus cephalus), gudgeon (Gobio gobio), roach (Rutilus rutilus), bleak (Alburnus alburnus), and perch (Perca fluviatilis)) exhibit a positive continuous response to the drainage area, in agreement with the view of a continuous increase of local richness downstream. River slope is an important variable for all species. Main species habitat requirements are discussed for each species.


1996 ◽  
Vol 70 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-31 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.R. Kennedy

AbstractThe successful colonization, establishment and spread of Pomphorhynchus laevis in a small, isolated, Devon river 128 km from the parasite's nearest focus in Dorset was followed over 11 years from 1985. The parasite was first detected in Anguilla anguilla and Platichthys flesus in 1988: by 1995 it had attained prevalence levels of 22.6% in A. anguilla and 43.6% in P. flesus and also occurred in 100% Salmo trutta, 50% Cottus gobio and Noemacheilus barbatulus. As judged by prevalence, abundance, proportion of females gravid and weight of gravid females, S. trutta was the preferred definitive host although C. gobio was a suitable host and may play a role in cycling the parasite: the other three species were unsuitable hosts. The intermediate host was the freshwater Gammarus pulex: the euryhaline G. zaddachi was not infected. On biological grounds, the P. laevis could be assigned to the English freshwater strain and was almost certainly introduced to the river by anthropochore stocking of S. trutta from a Dorset hatchery. The findings demonstrate conclusively that the English strain of P. laevis can colonize and establish in a new locality from which Leuciscus cephalus and Barbus barbus, its normal preferred hosts, are absent and use S. trutta instead. The results also confirm that P. laevis is a poor natural colonizer and appears always to be introduced to new localities by anthropochore transfers of fish. The implications of these conclusions for understanding the present distribution of P. laevis are discussed and it is considered that they provide direct evidence in support of the hypothesis that P. laevis was introduced to Ireland from England and subsequently adapted to use of S. trutta and G. duebeni there.


2018 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 75-114
Author(s):  
Doru Bănăduc ◽  
Răzvan Voicu ◽  
Lee Jason Baumgartner ◽  
Saša Marić ◽  
Alexandru Dobre ◽  
...  

Abstract The Bistra Mărului River fish fauna has been severely impacted by man-made activities, especially through longitudinal fragmentation, over the past 40 years. Fish fauna monitoring revealed structural changes and technical methods have been proposed, in order to restore the natural connectivity and the conservation of fish species. Benefits should accrue for key species: Salmo trutta fario, Cottus gobio, Thymallus thymallus, Eudontomyzon danfordi, Eudontomyzon vladykovi, Gobio uranoscopus, Barbus meridionalis, and Condrostoma nasus.


2007 ◽  
Vol 64 (5) ◽  
pp. 786-792 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Marc Roussel

Laboratory experiments on brown trout (Salmo trutta) embryos suggest that sublethal stress in the gravel nest such as hypoxia may alter the behaviour and survival of fish during the early juvenile period. Eggs and embryos were incubated at constant temperature (8.2 °C ± 0.6 standard deviation) under nonlethal dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations (3.0 mg·L–1; 26% air saturation level) and normoxia (10.3 mg·L–1 DO; 90% air saturation level). The average survival from fertilization to end of embryonic development was 70% and 85% for hypoxic and normoxic groups, respectively. Hypoxic embryos grew slowly compared with their normoxic counterparts, but similar body sizes were observed when yolk-sac absorption was completed. Fish incubated as hypoxic embryos delayed their emergence from the gravel in experimental channels. In presence of freshwater sculpin (Cottus gobio), their swimming activity was reduced by 20%, on average, and predation was enhanced by 14% compared with normoxic groups. Results support the view that subtle events early in a fish's ontogeny can have carry-over effects on later periods of its life cycle, and this phenomenon may be a significant source of variation in salmonid fitness.


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