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Route choices, migration speeds and daily migration activity of European silver eels <i>Anguilla anguilla</i> in the River Rhine, north-west Europe Association LOGRAMI http://zotero.org/users/237438 http://zotero.org/users/237438/items/I8EJDRGW 2010-02-24T13:12:30Z 2010-02-24T13:12:30Z I8EJDRGW 6536 journalArticle Breukelaar et al. 2009 3
Item Type Journal Article
Author A. W. Breukelaar
Author D. Ingendahl
Author F. T. Vriese
Author G. de Laak
Author S. Staas
Author J. G. P. Klein Breteler
URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1095-8649.2009.02293.x
Volume 74
Issue 9
Pages 2139-2157
Publication Journal of Fish Biology
Date 2009
DOI 10.1111/j.1095-8649.2009.02293.x
Accessed 2010-02-24 13:12:30
Library Catalog Wiley InterScience
Abstract Downstream migration of Anguilla anguilla silver eels was studied in the Lower Rhine, Germany, and the Rhine Delta, The Netherlands, in 200420132006. Fish (n = 457) released near Cologne with implanted transponders were tracked by remote telemetry at 12 fixed detection locations distributed along the different possible migration routes to the North Sea. Relatively more A. anguilla migrated via the Waal than the Nederrijn, as would be expected from the ratio of river discharges at the bifurcation point at Pannerden. Downstream migration from the release site to Rhine-Xanten, close to the German2013Dutch border, generally occurred in the autumn of the year of release but migration speeds tended to be low and variable and unaffected by maturation status or river discharge rates. Detection frequencies were not significantly related to discharge peaks or lunar cycles, but there was a minor detection peak 120136 h after sunset. Between 2004 and 2009, 43% of the 457 A. anguilla released were never detected and of the 260 detected entering the Netherlands, 83 (32%) were detected escaping to the sea, 78 (94%) via the Nieuwe Waterweg and three (4%) and two (2%) via the sluices in the Haringvlietdam and Afsluitdijk, respectively. Possible causes of non-detections are discussed and it is suggested that many A. anguilla temporarily ceased migration, but that fishing mortality could have been important during passage through the Dutch parts of the Rhine. Practical implications of the results for predicting emigration routes, timings and magnitudes and use in management initiatives to promote escapement of A. anguilla silver eels to the sea are critically discussed.

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