ABUNDANCE, SEASONALITY AND SIZE OF ATLANTIC SALMON SMOLTS ENTRAINED ON POWER-STATION INTAKE SCREENS IN THE SEVERN ESTUARY

Citation
Pn. Claridge et Ic. Potter, ABUNDANCE, SEASONALITY AND SIZE OF ATLANTIC SALMON SMOLTS ENTRAINED ON POWER-STATION INTAKE SCREENS IN THE SEVERN ESTUARY, Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 74(3), 1994, pp. 527-534
Citations number
23
Categorie Soggetti
Marine & Freshwater Biology
ISSN journal
00253154
Volume
74
Issue
3
Year of publication
1994
Pages
527 - 534
Database
ISI
SICI code
0025-3154(1994)74:3<527:ASASOA>2.0.ZU;2-F
Abstract
Atlantic salmon smolts were sampled from the intake screens of the Old bury power station in the inner Severn Estuary at weekly intervals bet ween July 1972 and June 1977. These catches, and those taken over near ly three years from the nearby Berkeley power station, demonstrated th at the abundance of smolts in the estuary peaked in autumn (October) a nd, to a far greater extent, in spring (April and May). However, small numbers of smolts were occasionally found in all other months of the year except July. Standard length-frequency distributions of smolts re mained unimodal throughout the year. Lengths ranged from 76 to 187 mm, mean 130.2 +/- 1.87 mm (95% CL), and wet weights ranged from 5.4 to 6 8.0 g, mean 26.9 +/- 1.17 g. The mean monthly standard length of smolt s increased slightly between the autumn of one year and the spring/ear ly summer of the next year, suggesting that, on average, the former we re six months younger than the latter. The condition factor was signif icantly greater in autumn (1.40) than in spring (1.23). It is estimate d that the total number of salmon smolts entrained annually on the scr eens at Oldbury during the five years ranged from 92 to 791, with a me an of 405. Total estimated numbers at Berkeley ranged from 196 to 788 per annum. The numbers at Oldbury are lower than those estimated for t he downstream migrants of the Twaite shad, another anadromous species, and far lower than those of the most abundant of the marine fish spec ies that use the Severn Estuary as a nursery area.