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<i>Anguilla rostrata</i> glass eel migration and recruitment in the estuary and Gulf of St Lawrence Association LOGRAMI http://zotero.org/users/237438 http://zotero.org/users/237438/items/AVW575VI 2010-02-24T13:04:01Z 2010-02-24T13:04:01Z AVW575VI 6536 journalArticle Dutil et al. 2009 2
Item Type Journal Article
Author J.-D. Dutil
Author P. Dumont
Author D. K. Cairns
Author P. S. Galbraith
Author G. Verreault
Author M. Castonguay
Author S. Proulx
URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1095-8649.2009.02292.x
Volume 74
Issue 9
Pages 1970-1984
Publication Journal of Fish Biology
Date 2009
DOI 10.1111/j.1095-8649.2009.02292.x
Accessed 2010-02-24 13:04:01
Library Catalog Wiley InterScience
Abstract This study describes catches of Anguilla rostrata glass eels and associated oceanographic conditions in the St Lawrence Estuary and Gulf. Ichthyoplankton survey data suggest that they enter the Gulf primarily in May, migrate at the surface at night, and disperse broadly once they have passed Cabot Strait. They arrive in estuaries beginning at about mid-June and through the month of July. Migration extends west up to Québec City, in the freshwater zone of the St Lawrence Estuary, 1000 km west of Cabot Strait. Anguilla rostrata glass eels travel between Cabot Strait and receiving estuaries at a straight-line ground speed of c. 10201315 km day22121. Catches of fish per unit effort in estuaries in the St Lawrence system are much lower than those reported for the Atlantic coast of Canada. Low abundance of A. rostrata glass eels in the St Lawrence system may be due to cold surface temperatures during the migration period which decrease swimming capacity, long distances from the spawning ground to Cabot Strait and from Cabot Strait to the destination waters (especially the St Lawrence River), complex circulation patterns, and hypoxic conditions in bottom waters of the Laurentian Channel and the St Lawrence Estuary.

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