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Movements of spawning sockeye salmon in Hidden Creek, Brooks Lake, Alaska

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Title Movements of spawning sockeye salmon in Hidden Creek, Brooks Lake, Alaska
Names Tsunoda, Setsuwo (creator)
Hall, James D. (advisor)
Date Issued 1966-06-23 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1967
Abstract The movements of a population of adult sockeye salmon
(Oncorhynchus nerka) were followed in a small tributary of Brooks
Lake, Alaska until spawning was nearly complete in 1963. The objectives
of the study were to describe the movements of sockeye
salmon on the spawning ground of an entire small stream, to determine
factors related to such movements, and to consider the significance
of the movements to the species.
The spawning run was inventoried at a weir located near the
mouth of the tributary. Portions of the run were sampled as they
immigrated, and the sampled fish were tagged to enable subsequent
identification of individual fish on the spawning ground. Following
the initial immigration, daily observations were made to ascertain
the location of all fish and the activities of the tagged fish. Tagging
had no material effect on either dispersal in the stream or pairing
of spawners.
The spawning run totalled 2,495; the ratio of males to females
was 2.27:1.00, The run consisted preponderantly of males that had
spent two winters in the ocean (two ocean-years) and females that
had spent three winters in the ocean (three ocean-years). They
entered the tributary over a period of 14 days in two waves separated
by an interval of three days.
The overall median life span in the stream was 12 days in the
first wave and eight days in the second wave. The difference was
primarily due to predation on the salmon by the brown bear (Ursus
arctos).
The average female established a redd in 1.4 days; thereafter
the females rarely moved far from their redds. The average male
required 2.3 days to establish himself in a spawning locale; thereafter
most males remained within a relatively small area. The males
showed a decided tendency to remain in areas with a high density of
females on redds. Fewer females than males overshot their spawning
sites.
No relation was found between the movements of spawners and
either variations of water level or surface water temperature of the
stream. Bear predation disrupted spawning activities only locally
and temporarily.
Males of three ocean-years paired with more females per male
than did males of one or two ocean-years. But because of their greater numbers two-ocean-year males participated in more spawnings than did three-ocean-year males. The mean duration of pairing
of a particular male with a particular female on a redd was 1.25
days.
I concluded that homing within the tributary did not occur;
therefore its spawning stock must be a homogeneous unit. The role
of the male is primarily one of fertilization of the eggs, not one of
defense of territory. Because of the abnormally high ratio of males
to females, competition between males for spawning partners resulted
in most males of one or two ocean-years being relegated to
attend females paired with larger males. Conflict among the males
was apparently largely confined within two separate classes of males:
males 50 cm or shorter jockeyed among themselves for seemingly
preferred positions of attendance next to a pair on a redd, while
males 51 cm or longer competed for spawning partners.
The polygamous habit in sockeye salmon usually results in a
seeming excess of males on the spawning ground beyond the number
required to fertilize the eggs. I propose that this "surplus" of males
provides a safety factor in times of low numbers in a stock and the
competition needed to disperse the males among the available females;
both provisions insure fertilization of the available eggs,
However, crucial experiments need to be done on an entire population
of sockeye salmon with artificially reduced ratios of males to females to determine whether the movements of the spawners would
result in an efficiency of egg fertilization sufficient to make harvesting
of the "surplus" males feasible.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Sockeye salmon
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/47306

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