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Early predictors of life-history events: the link between first feeding date, dominance and seaward migration in Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar L.
Authors:N. B. Metcalfe   J. E. Thorpe
Affiliation:Fish Behaviour and Ecology Group, Zoology Department, Glasgow University, Glasgow G12 8QQ U.K.;SOAFD Freshwater Fisheries Laboratory, Pitlochry, Perthshire PH16 5LB, U.K.
Abstract:Previous studies have suggested that the earliest fry to emerge from a salmonid redd may have an advantage in the subsequent competition for feeding sites, partly through a 'prior residence' effect. Here we examined whether there was any relationship between the relative date of first feeding and subsequent dominance status and growth in a sibling group of Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar L., fry. Earlier-feeding fry were dominant over their later-feeding siblings (controlling for prior residence), despite not being any larger. However, these early fish soon established and then maintained a size advantage. This led to an increased probability of early-feeding fish migrating to sea at age 1 year (rather than 2 or more). Thus a difference of less than 1 week in the relative timing of first feeding can translate into a year's difference in the timing of migration.
Keywords:Salmo salar    dominance    growth    life histories
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