Long-term variation in numbers and biomass of silver eels being produced in two European river systems
Poole, W. Russell; Diserud, Ola Håvard; Thorstad, Eva Bonsak; Durif, Caroline; Dolan, Conor; Sandlund, Odd Terje; Bergesen, Knut Aanestad; Rogan, Gerard; Kelly, Sean D.; Vøllestad, Leif Asbjørn
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Accepted version
Åpne
Permanent lenke
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2498808Utgivelsesdato
2018Metadata
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Originalversjon
10.1093/icesjms/fsy053Sammendrag
The European eel (Anguilla anguilla) population has been in decline at least since the 1960s and reliable regional information, particularly on
the spawner production and escapement (i.e. the silver eel life stage), is a requirement of the EU stock recovery regulation. Two comparable
time series exist in Burrishoole (Ireland) and Imsa (Norway), with monitoring of total silver eel production since the early 1970s. Numbers of
emigrating silver eels fell significantly (p < 0.0001) in the 1980s (breakpoints: Burrishoole 1982; Imsa 1988), in both catchments from >4000
eels per annum to 2000 eels per annum. The proportion of male eels dropped and the average size of female eels increased. Biomass of silver
eels escaping has remained similar in Burrishoole (1.1/1.2 kg/ha), but not in Imsa (2.1/0.9 kg/ha) between the early period and the 2000s.
Factors that govern the onset of eel maturation (silvering) and the annual production of silver eels are little understood. In this paper, the influence
of time-lagged environmental variables on silver eel production is examined. Annual variation in the time series was partly
(r2 Burrishoole ¼ 0.43, Imsa ¼ 0.46) explained by variation in water temperature and water level. Annual number of migrating eels in both
catchments was positively related to summer temperature and summer water flow, negatively related to summer temperatures in the previous
year, and in the Burrishoole, also negatively related to high water levels in September/October. The models did not transfer well between
catchments, indicating likely catchment specific environmental factors impacting on eel production. The reduction in eel numbers observed
in both catchments, accompanied by the change in sex ratio and mean weight of females that contribute to maintain biomass production,
calls into question the advisability of basing a spawner escapement recovery target on biomass alone, while numbers and proportions of males
decline.