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ARTICLE

Survival of Migrating Atlantic Salmon Smolts through the Penobscot River, Maine: a Prerestoration Assessment

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Pages 1255-1268 | Received 15 Aug 2010, Accepted 07 Mar 2011, Published online: 28 Sep 2011
 

Abstract

Survival, distribution, and behavior of hatchery (n = 493) and naturally reared (n = 133) smolts of Atlantic salmon Salmo salar migrating through the Penobscot River and estuary in Maine were evaluated with acoustic telemetry in 2005 and 2006. Survival and use of a secondary migration path (the Stillwater Branch) were estimated with a multistate mark–recapture model. Higher rates of mortality per kilometer (range = 0.01–0.22) were observed near release sites and within reaches that contained three particular dams: Howland, West Enfield, and Milford dams. Estimated total survival of tagged hatchery smolts through entire individual reaches containing those dams ranged from 0.52 ( 0.18) to 0.94 ( 0.09), whereas survival through most of the reaches without dams exceeded 0.95. Of those smolts that survived to the Penobscot River–Stillwater Branch split at Marsh Island, most (≥74%) remained in the main stem around Marsh Island, where they experienced lower survival than fish that used the Stillwater Branch. Movement rates of hatchery-reared smolts were significantly lower through reaches containing dams than through reaches that lacked dams. Smolts arriving at dams during the day experienced longer delays than smolts arriving at night. Planned removal of two dams in this system is expected to enhance the passage of smolts through the main-stem corridor. However, the dams currently scheduled for removal (Great Works and Veazie dams) had less influence on smolt survival than some of the dams that will remain. This case study shows that by examining prerestoration migration dynamics throughout entire river systems rather than just in the vicinity of particular dams, tracking studies can help prioritize restoration efforts or predict the costs and benefits of future hydrosystem changes.

Received August 15, 2010; accepted March 7, 2011.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank John Kocik and Tim Sheehan (NOAA Fisheries), James McCleave, Michael Bailey (University of Maine), Nick Johnson (U.S. Geological Survey), and two anonymous reviewers for providing valuable feedback on the manuscript. Financial support was generously provided by the University of Maine, the West Enfield Fund, the Maine Agricultural and Forest Experiment Station, and the Maine Cooperative Fisheries and Wildlife Research Unit. We are grateful to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for providing Atlantic salmon and to the Penobscot Nation for access to their land. We also acknowledge S. Hall (Pennsylvania Power and Light); R. Saunders, G. Goulette, P. Music, and E. Hastings (NOAA Fisheries); C. Fay (Penobscot Nation); J. Trial, R. Dill, and M. Simpson (Maine Atlantic Salmon Commission); and L. Holbrook, C. Gardner, S. Fernandes, and many students from the University of Maine for their assistance and insights. Mention of trade names or commercial products does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Government. This paper is contribution number 3228 of the Maine Agricultural and Forest Experiment Station.

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