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Article

The Effect of Light Intensity on Sockeye Salmon Fry Migratory Behavior and Predation by Cottids in the Cedar River, Washington

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Pages 128-145 | Received 02 Jun 2002, Accepted 29 Apr 2003, Published online: 08 Jan 2011
 

Abstract

We examined the relationship between light intensity, migratory behavior of sockeye salmon Oncorhynchus nerka fry, and predation by cottids Cottus spp. We tested the hypothesis that above-natural intensities of nighttime light would increase cottid predation of sockeye salmon fry. In circular tank experiments under controlled laboratory conditions, we tested the ability of cottids to prey on sockeye salmon fry under six different light intensities using minimal water circulation to separate the effect of the migratory behavior of fry from the ability of cottids to capture them. We found that cottids preyed most effectively in complete darkness, whereas the lowest predation occurred at the brightest light intensity. We next tested the predation ability of cottids at four light intensities in a pair of artificial streams to simulate more natural conditions. In experiments without cottids, the majority of fry passed quickly through the artificial streams under complete darkness, but as light intensity was increased, fewer fry emigrated and did so at a slower rate. With cottids present and increased light intensity, even fewer fry emigrated but they did so at a faster rate than did those in the stream without cottids. We determined that cottids probably consumed about 5% of the sockeye salmon fry under complete darkness and ate about 45% of the fry at the brightest light intensity tested. In experimental field trials, the shoreline abundance of fry and predation by cottids increased as light intensities increased. Using two small lights within an 8-m shoreline section on the Cedar River, Washington, we delayed as many as 550 sockeye salmon fry and observed predation of as many as 7.6 fry/cottid. At the end of the experiment, we turned the lights off and noted that the shoreline abundance of fry declined dramatically. At two locations on the Cedar River lit by city lights, the abundance of sockeye salmon fry and predation by cottids was substantially greater than at nearby sites with low light. Also, we demonstrated at one site that reducing light intensity substantially reduced predation on sockeye salmon fry. Overall, we conclude that increased light intensity appears to slow or stop out-migration of fry, making them more vulnerable to capture by predators such as cottids.

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