Report on an egg bioassay experiment

In October 1992, a fish population survey of the Swanside Beck system revealed that the densities of juvenile salmon present in the beck were generally poor. The survey highlighted that a potential reason for this may be due to a lack of spawning substrate resulting from siltation. Numerous workers have found that increased levels of A salmonid egg box experiment of Swanside Beck carried out in the spring of 1994, revealed that the survival rates in the majority of sites were good. While the in-site variability was relatively high, mean survival rates remained in excess of 70%. As a result egg survival rates were eliminated as the reason for low juvenile salmonid production. The only site with a relatively low survival rate was Swanside Beck downstream of Cowgill Beck. However, even at this site siltation was eliminated as the cause of the increased mortality rate. It is recommended that a salmonid stocking of Swanside Beck should be carried out this year. This should be followed by an electric fishing survey to evaluate juvenile salmonid survival rates.

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: National Rivers Authority
Format: monograph biblioteca
Language:English
Published: National Rivers Authority North West 1995
Subjects:Ecology, Fisheries, Limnology, England, Ribble Catchment, Salmon fisheries, Fry, Survival, Stocking (organisms), Silting,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/24881
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-248812021-06-28T03:22:11Z Report on an egg bioassay experiment National Rivers Authority Ecology Fisheries Limnology England Ribble Catchment Salmon fisheries Fry Survival Stocking (organisms) Silting In October 1992, a fish population survey of the Swanside Beck system revealed that the densities of juvenile salmon present in the beck were generally poor. The survey highlighted that a potential reason for this may be due to a lack of spawning substrate resulting from siltation. Numerous workers have found that increased levels of A salmonid egg box experiment of Swanside Beck carried out in the spring of 1994, revealed that the survival rates in the majority of sites were good. While the in-site variability was relatively high, mean survival rates remained in excess of 70%. As a result egg survival rates were eliminated as the reason for low juvenile salmonid production. The only site with a relatively low survival rate was Swanside Beck downstream of Cowgill Beck. However, even at this site siltation was eliminated as the cause of the increased mortality rate. It is recommended that a salmonid stocking of Swanside Beck should be carried out this year. This should be followed by an electric fishing survey to evaluate juvenile salmonid survival rates. Environment Agency Archives North West 2021-06-24T16:16:51Z 2021-06-24T16:16:51Z 1995 monograph http://hdl.handle.net/1834/24881 en http://fba.org.uk application/pdf application/pdf 12 National Rivers Authority North West Preston, UK http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/8079 1256 2012-02-17 13:42:01 8079 Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Ecology
Fisheries
Limnology
England
Ribble Catchment
Salmon fisheries
Fry
Survival
Stocking (organisms)
Silting
Ecology
Fisheries
Limnology
England
Ribble Catchment
Salmon fisheries
Fry
Survival
Stocking (organisms)
Silting
spellingShingle Ecology
Fisheries
Limnology
England
Ribble Catchment
Salmon fisheries
Fry
Survival
Stocking (organisms)
Silting
Ecology
Fisheries
Limnology
England
Ribble Catchment
Salmon fisheries
Fry
Survival
Stocking (organisms)
Silting
Report on an egg bioassay experiment
description In October 1992, a fish population survey of the Swanside Beck system revealed that the densities of juvenile salmon present in the beck were generally poor. The survey highlighted that a potential reason for this may be due to a lack of spawning substrate resulting from siltation. Numerous workers have found that increased levels of A salmonid egg box experiment of Swanside Beck carried out in the spring of 1994, revealed that the survival rates in the majority of sites were good. While the in-site variability was relatively high, mean survival rates remained in excess of 70%. As a result egg survival rates were eliminated as the reason for low juvenile salmonid production. The only site with a relatively low survival rate was Swanside Beck downstream of Cowgill Beck. However, even at this site siltation was eliminated as the cause of the increased mortality rate. It is recommended that a salmonid stocking of Swanside Beck should be carried out this year. This should be followed by an electric fishing survey to evaluate juvenile salmonid survival rates.
author2 National Rivers Authority
author_facet National Rivers Authority
format monograph
topic_facet Ecology
Fisheries
Limnology
England
Ribble Catchment
Salmon fisheries
Fry
Survival
Stocking (organisms)
Silting
title Report on an egg bioassay experiment
title_short Report on an egg bioassay experiment
title_full Report on an egg bioassay experiment
title_fullStr Report on an egg bioassay experiment
title_full_unstemmed Report on an egg bioassay experiment
title_sort report on an egg bioassay experiment
publisher National Rivers Authority North West
publishDate 1995
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/24881
_version_ 1756077955316973568