salvelinus alpinus
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2022 ◽  
Vol 22 ◽  
pp. 100949
Author(s):  
Bernard-Antonin Dupont-Cyr ◽  
Nathalie R. Le François ◽  
Felix Christen ◽  
Véronique Desrosiers ◽  
Arianne Savoie ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Joseph S. Phillips ◽  
Guðni Guðbergsson ◽  
Anthony R Ives

Quantifying temporal variation in demographic rates is a central goal of population ecology. In this study, we analyzed a multidecadal age-structured time series of Arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus) abundance in Lake Mývatn, Iceland, to infer the time-varying demographic response of the population to reduced harvest in the wake of the fishery's collapse. Our analysis shows that while survival probability of adults increased following the alleviation of harvesting pressure, per capita recruitment consistently declined over most of the study period, until the final three years when it began to increase. The countervailing demographic trends resulted in only limited directional change in the total population size and population growth rate. Rather, the population dynamics were dominated by large interannual variability and a shift towards an older age distribution. Our results are indicative of a slow recovery of the population after its collapse, despite the rising number of adults following relaxed harvest. This underscores the potential for heterogeneous demographic responses to management efforts due to the complex ecological context in which such efforts take place.


Author(s):  
Véronique Dubos ◽  
André St-Hilaire ◽  
Normand E Bergeron

Arctic char is a fish species known to occupy diverse habitats within the Arctic region. However, summer habitat use during the juvenile stage of the anadromous form is largely unknown. The present study aims to characterize fry and parr summer habitat preferences. Surveys were conducted by electrofishing, associated with physical habitat characterization on several rivers of the Ungava Bay, Nunavik, Canada. At the microhabitat and station scales, fry showed significant habitat preferences for shallow water and slow velocity. At the mesohabitat scale, fry showed a significant habitat selectivity for riffles. This habitat selectivity implies that habitat models can be built to evaluate the potential of habitat suitability for Arctic char fry. However, no significant habitat selectivity was found for parr. Parr size was nonetheless positively correlated with velocity, which was found to be a limitative factor for juvenile habitat use. This first attempt at modeling juvenile anadromous Arctic char habitat in rivers emphasizes the importance of selecting an appropriate spatial scale and reiterates the fact that parr showed relatively high plasticity in stream habitat selection.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabrielle Grenier ◽  
Aslak Smalås ◽  
Runar Kjær ◽  
Rune Knudsen

Sympatric Arctic charr, Salvelinus alpinus (L. 1758), morphs have flexible but repeated life history strategies tested across five Norwegian lakes. In several Scandinavian polymorphic Arctic charr populations differentiated by their diet and habitat use, a large littoral omnivorous (LO) morph commonly cooccurs with a smaller profundal spawning (PB/PZ) morph. A third, large piscivorous (PP) morph is also known to occur within a portion of Arctic charr populations in the profundal habitat along with the PB/PZ individuals. Life history traits, such as age at maturity, growth, and diet are known to differ among coexisting morphs. Notably, the PP morph was the longest morph with the oldest age at maturity while the PB/PZ morph showed the shortest lengths overall and youngest age with LO morph being intermediate in both traits. Growth parameters differed across all the morphs. When examining growth within morph groups, the LO morph was found to have different growth across all lakes, while similar reproductive investments and different energy acquisition patterns were seen within the PB/PZ and PP morphs. These results suggest repeat evolution in several life history strategies of reproductively isolated Arctic charr sympatric morphs, notably for the first time in the PP morph, while also highlighting the importance of the local environment in modulating life history traits.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joris Philip ◽  
Marion Dellinger ◽  
David Benhaïm

AbstractBehavioural traits have been shown to have implications in fish welfare and growth performances in aquaculture. If several studies have demonstrated the existence of repeatable and heritable behavioural traits (i.e., animal personality), the methodology to assess personality in fishes is often carried out in solitary context, which appears to somewhat limit their use from a selective breeding perspective because these tests are too time consuming. To address this drawback, group-based tests have been developed. In Nordic country, Arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus) is widely used in aquaculture, but no selection effort on behavioural traits has yet been carried out. Specifically, in this study we examined if risk-taking behaviour was repeatable and correlated in group and solitary context and if the early influences of physical environment affect the among-individual variation of behavioural trait across time in order to verify whether a group risk-taking test could be used as a selective breeding tool. Here, we found that in both contexts and treatments, the risk-taking behaviour was repeatable across a short period of 6 days. However, no cross-context consistency was found between group and solitary, which indicates that Arctic charr express different behavioural trait in group and solitary.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samantha V. Beck ◽  
Gary R. Carvalho ◽  
Ian McCarthy ◽  
Walter Hanks ◽  
Robert Evans ◽  
...  

AbstractAquatic species throughout the world are threatened by extinction in many parts of their range, particularly in their most southerly distributions. Arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus) is a Holarctic species with a distribution that includes the glacial lakes of North Wales, towards it southern limit. To date, no genetic studies have been conducted to determine the genetic health of the three remaining native Arctic charr populations in North Wales, despite exposure to stocking and adverse environmental and ecological conditions. We used seven microsatellite loci to determine whether: 1) genetic differentiation existed between native populations; 2) translocated populations from Llyn Peris were genetically similar to the historically connected Llyn Padarn population; and 3) hatchery supplementation negatively impacted genetic diversity in Llyn Padarn. All three native populations retained their genetic integrity, with Llyn Bodlyn showing high levels of divergence (FST = 0.26 ± 0.02SD) as well as low genetic diversity (HO 0.30) compared to remaining populations (HO 0.64 ± 0.14SD). Although evidence suggests that stocking increased the effective population size of Llyn Padarn in the short term without impacting genetic diversity, the long term effects of such practices are yet to be seen. Results provide baseline data for conservation management, and highlight the need for protection of small isolated populations that are being negatively impacted by the processes of genetic drift due to escalating anthropogenic pressures. Continual monitoring of both Arctic charr and their habitats using a combination of methods will increase the likelihood that these threatened and iconic populations will persist in the future.


Foods ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 2621
Author(s):  
Iris Koch ◽  
Pranab Das ◽  
Bronte E. McPhedran ◽  
John M. Casselman ◽  
Kristy L. Moniz ◽  
...  

As mercury emissions continue and climate-mediated permafrost thaw increases the burden of this contaminant in northern waters, Inuit from a Northwest passage community in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago pressed for an assessment of their subsistence catches. Sea-run salmonids (n = 537) comprising Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus), lake trout (S. namaycush), lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis), and cisco (C. autumnalis, C. sardinella) were analyzed for muscle mercury. Methylmercury is a neurotoxin and bioaccumulated with fish age, but other factors including selenium and other elements, diet and trophic level as assessed by stable isotopes of nitrogen (δ15N) and carbon (δ13C), as well as growth rate, condition, and geographic origin, also contributed depending on the species, even though all the fish shared a similar anadromous or sea-run life history. Although mean mercury concentrations for most of the species were ~0.09 µg·g−1 wet weight (ww), below the levels described in several jurisdictions for subsistence fisheries (0.2 µg·g−1 ww), 70% of lake trout were above this guideline (0.35 µg·g−1 ww), and 19% exceeded the 2.5-fold higher levels for commercial sale. We thus urge the development of consumption advisories for lake trout for the protection of pregnant women and young children and that additionally, periodic community-based monitoring be initiated.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marilena Frye ◽  
Torvald B. Egeland ◽  
Jarle Tryti Nordeide ◽  
Ivar Folstad

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