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Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Recruitment dynamics of juvenile salmonids: Comparisons among populations and with classic case studies Matte JO; Fraser DJ; Grant JWA; 38599588
BIOLOGY
2 Discovery of an adjuvant that resensitizes polymyxin B-resistant bacteria Mahdavi M; Findlay BL; 38096681
BIOLOGY
3 Understanding Fluconazole Tolerance in Candida albicans: Implications for Effective Treatment of Candidiasis and Combating Invasive Fungal Infections Feng Y; Lu H; Whiteway M; Jiang Y; 37918789
BIOLOGY
4 Cross-collection latent Beta-Liouville allocation model training with privacy protection and applications Luo Z; Amayri M; Fan W; Bouguila N; 36685642
ENCS
5 Stable Cavitation-Mediated Delivery of miR-126 to Endothelial Cells He S; Singh D; Yusefi H; Helfield B; 36559150
BIOLOGY
6 A Small Molecule Inhibitor of Erg251 Makes Fluconazole Fungicidal by Inhibiting the Synthesis of the 14α-Methylsterols Lu H; Li W; Whiteway M; Wang H; Zhu S; Ji Z; Feng Y; Yan L; Fang T; Li L; Ni T; Zhang X; Lv Q; Ding Z; Qiu L; Zhang D; Jiang Y; 36475771
BIOLOGY
7 Pattern and Visual Prognostic Factors of Behcet's Uveitis in Northwest Iran Alizadeh Ghavidel L; Bagheri M; Mousavi F; Rezaei L; Hazeri S; Hashemi HS; 35765637
BIOLOGY
8 Removal of SARS-CoV-2 using UV+Filter in built environment: simulation/evaluation by utilizing validated numerical method Feng Z; Cao SJ; Haghighat F; 34367884
ENCS
9 Drug discovery and chemical probing in Drosophila. Millet-Boureima C, Selber-Hnatiw S, Gamberi C 32551911
BIOLOGY
10 Early Life History of Coreoperca herzi in Han River, Korea. Park JM, Jeon HB, Suk HY, Cho SJ, Han KH 32411919
BIOLOGY
11 Population variation in density-dependent growth, mortality and their trade-off in a stream fish. Matte JM, Fraser DJ, Grant JWA 31642512
BIOLOGY

 

Title:Recruitment dynamics of juvenile salmonids: Comparisons among populations and with classic case studies
Authors:Matte JOFraser DJGrant JWA
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38599588/
DOI:10.1111/jfb.15748
Publication:Journal of fish biology
Keywords:density dependenceenvironmentintraspecific variationjuvenile salmonidspopulationsstock-recruitment
PMID:38599588 Category: Date Added:2024-04-11
Dept Affiliation: BIOLOGY
1 Department of Biology, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Description:

Understanding recruitment, the process by which individuals are added to a population or to a fishery, is critical for understanding population dynamics and facilitating sustainable fisheries management. Important variation in recruitment dynamics is observed among populations, wherein some populations exhibit asymptotic productivity and others exhibit overcompensation (i.e., compensatory density-dependence in recruitment). Our ability to understand this interpopulation variability in recruitment patterns is limited by a poor understanding of the underlying mechanisms, such as the complex interactions between density dependence, recruitment, and environment. Furthermore, most studies on recruitment are conducted using an observational design with long time series that are seldom replicated across populations in an experimentally controlled fashion. Without proper replication, extrapolations between populations are tenuous, and the underlying environmental trends are challenging to quantify. To address these issues, we conducted a field experiment manipulating stocking densities of juvenile brook trout Salvelinus fontinalis in three wild populations to show that these neighboring populations-which exhibit divergent patterns of density dependence due to environmental conditions-also have important differences in recruitment dynamics. Testing against four stock-recruitment models (density independent, linear, Beverton-Holt, and Ricker), populations exhibited ~twofold variation in asymptotic productivity, with no overcompensation following a Beverton-Holt model. Although environmental variables (e.g., temperature, pH, depth, substrate) correlated with population differences in recruitment, they did not improve the predictive power in individual populations. Comparing our patterns of recruitment with classic salmonid case studies revealed that despite differences in the shape and parameters of the curves (i.e., Ricker vs. Beverton-Holt), a maximum stocking density of about five YOY fish/m2 emerged. Higher densities resulted in very marginal increases in recruitment (Beverton-Holt) or reduced recruitment due to overcompensation (Ricker).





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