An Assessment of Inner Bay of Fundy Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar) Spawning Success in Fundy National Park

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2023-04

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University of New Brunswick

Abstract

Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) have declined precipitously throughout most of their North American range. As a result, many strategies have been implemented to try and restore Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar). One such restoration strategy, implemented by the Fundy Salmon Recovery project, involves the collection of endangered inner Bay of Fundy salmon smolts from their natal rivers to be reared at the world’s first marine conservation farm to maturity. This strategy includes both an open net ocean pen and freshwater hatchery components. Upon maturity, these salmon are returned to their natal rivers as adults. This release may be done by hand, by carrying the sexually mature salmon to the water or by carefully lowering them into pools using a helicopter, so they can naturally spawn. In my study, I aim to determine whether these differences in rearing and release strategies led to significant changes in offspring production in the adults of two Fundy National Park rivers. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) at 185 loci were used to match parents with the next year’s offspring using Colony, a parentage analysis software. Using a fixed effects linear model, I found that there was no significant effect on offspring production caused by release strategy in both rivers. On the Point Wolfe River, rearing strategy was found to have a significant effect on offspring production – with marine-reared adults out-performing freshwater reared adults. This suggests that the marine-rearing strategy, implemented by the Fundy Salmon Recovery project can outperform, in some cases the more traditional freshwater rearing strategy in terms of releasing high-fitness adult Atlantic salmon.

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