Fishes (May 2022)

The Lifetime Migratory History of Anadromous Brook Trout (<i>Salvelinus fontinalis</i>): Insights and Risks from Pesticide-Induced Fish Kills

  • Scott D. Roloson,
  • Kyle M. Knysh,
  • Sean J. Landsman,
  • Travis L. James,
  • Brendan J. Hicks,
  • Michael R. van den Heuvel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes7030109
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 3
p. 109

Abstract

Read online

Brook trout populations in Prince Edward Island, Canada, have experienced over 50 pesticide-related fish kills since the 1960s. Life history evaluation of large sea-run brook trout recovered following two fish kill events was compared with a reference river using strontium:calcium otolith microchemistry. This study examined the dual hypotheses that anadromous brook trout are more likely to arise from sea-run mothers, and that freshwater entry timing makes them vulnerable to pesticide-induced fish kills. A total 89% of the fish exhibited an anadromous life history, and 77% of these were offspring of anadromous mothers, suggesting that anadromy is dominant in progeny of sea-run mothers. This study adds to our understanding of the maternal inheritance of anadromy in sea-run brook trout populations. Additionally, freshwater entry precedes the majority of fish kill events, illustrating that the overlap between migration and pesticide runoff contributes to the cumulative population risks to sea-run brook trout.

Keywords