Record Details

Beyond dichotomous life histories in partially migrating populations: cessation of anadromy in a long-lived fish

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Beyond dichotomous life histories in partially migrating populations: cessation of anadromy in a long-lived fish
Names Bond, Morgan H. (creator)
Miller, Jessica A. (creator)
Date Issued 2015-07 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by Ecological Society of America and can be found at: http://www.esajournals.org/loi/ecol
Abstract Across animal taxa, migration allows individuals to exploit habitats and
resources that predictably vary seasonally in suitability. Theory predicts that the ‘‘decision’’ to
migrate or not is shaped by the relative fitness costs and benefits of exhibiting a given life
history. Adoption of a migratory strategy is widely thought to reflect a dichotomous outcome;
individuals are either resident or migratory, and continue to exhibit this life history until
death. In fishes, anadromy and freshwater residency represents a well-studied life history
dichotomy. Resident individuals may adopt a migratory life history later in life, but migratory
individuals are not known to abandon this pattern. Here, we investigated the fitness benefits,
as measured by body size, of residency and anadromy in a salmonid fish, Dolly Varden,
Salvelinus malma, in Alaska, and reveal a novel life history: cessation of migration by older,
larger individuals. Otolith microchemical analysis of Dolly Varden showed that while most
fish migrated to sea at least once in their lives, lifelong resident fish exist in streams with close
proximity to the ocean. Moreover, the probability of seaward migration in any year of life
decreased annually after an individual’s fourth year, and no fish migrated after their eighth
year, while the oldest fish were captured in their 11th year. Migration conferred a size
advantage in young fish, but the size benefits of marine foraging declined in older fish, at which
time fish increasingly ‘‘retired from anadromy.’’ Additionally, measurement of both natal
otolith chemistry and the gonadosomatic index indicated a continued contribution to lifetime
fitness, rather than senescence, in retired individuals. We suggest that the novel life history of
reversion to residency by older fish is viable because foraging opportunities are subsidized by
the predictable annual supply of energy-rich eggs and carcasses of spawning Pacific salmon.
Genre Article
Topic char
Identifier Bond, M. H., Miller, J. A., & Quinn, T. P. (2015). Beyond dichotomous life histories in partially migrating populations: cessation of anadromy in a long-lived fish. Ecology, 96(7), 1899-1910. doi:10.1890/14-1551.1

© Western Waters Digital Library - GWLA member projects - Designed by the J. Willard Marriott Library - Hosted by Oregon State University Libraries and Press