Skilbrei, O. T., et al. “Impact of Parasites on Salmon Recruitment in the Northeast Atlantic Ocean”. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, vol. 280, no. 1750, 2013, p. 20122359, https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2012.2359.

Genre

  • Journal Article
Contributors
Author: Skilbrei, O. T.
Author: Todd, C. D.
Author: Finstad, B.
Author: Krkošek, M.
Author: Gargan, P. G.
Author: Revie, C. W.
Date Issued
2013
Abstract

Parasites may have large effects on host population dynamics, marine fisheries and conservation, but a clear elucidation of their impact is limited by a lack of ecosystem-scale experimental data. We conducted a meta-analysis of replicated manipulative field experiments concerning the influence of parasitism by crustaceans on the marine survival of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.). The data include 24 trials in which tagged smolts (totalling 283 347 fish; 1996-2008) were released as paired control and parasiticide-treated groups into 10 areas of Ireland and Norway. All experimental fish were infection-free when released into freshwater, and a proportion of each group was recovered as adult recruits returning to coastal waters 1 or more years later. Treatment had a significant positive effect on survival to recruitment, with an overall effect size (odds ratio) of 1.29 that corresponds to an estimated loss of 39 per cent (95% CI: 18-55%) of adult salmon recruitment. The parasitic crustaceans were probably acquired during early marine migration in areas that host large aquaculture populations of domesticated salmon, which elevate local abundances of ectoparasitic copepods-particularly Lepeophtheirus salmonis. These results provide experimental evidence from a large marine ecosystem that parasites can have large impacts on fish recruitment, fisheries and conservation.

Note

The Royal Society

Source type: Electronic(1)

Language

  • English
Page range
20122359
Host Title
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Host Abbreviated Title
Proc Biol Sci
Volume
280
Issue
1750
ISSN
00804649
0962-8452
14712954
PMID Identifier
23135680
PubMed Central Identifier
PMC3574446