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Environmental influences on the phenology of immigrating juvenile eels over weirs at the tidal limit of regulated rivers.

Boardman, R. M., Pinder, A. C., Piper, A. T., Gutmann Roberts, C., Wright, R. M. and Britton, J R., 2024. Environmental influences on the phenology of immigrating juvenile eels over weirs at the tidal limit of regulated rivers. Hydrobiologia, 851, 4439-4458.

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Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.

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[img] PDF (OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE)
s10750-024-05596-1.pdf - Published Version
Restricted to Repository staff only
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.

2MB

DOI: 10.1007/s10750-024-05596-1

Abstract

Recruitment of the catadromous and critically endangered European eel Anguilla anguilla in Europe has declined substantially since the 1980s, with considerable knowledge gaps remaining in many aspects of their life cycle. The aim was to assess eel migration phenology in three regulated rivers in England between 2009 and 2019 through analyses of eel numbers using passes at their tidal limits, with calculation of the annual timings of migration initiation (10% of all eels passed, T10), peak (50%, T50) and conclusion (90%, T90). Across the three rivers, T10 varied between Julian Day (‘Day’) 94 and 173. Years of earlier T10 had significantly earlier T50, where T50 varied between Day 105 and 200. The considerable inter-annual variability in migration timings was associated with environmental variables; earlier T10 and T50 occurred in years of warmer river temperatures (RTs) and cooler sea surface temperatures (SST), and in years where RTs were higher than SSTs. No environmental variables were significant predictors of T90. These results indicate that whilst there is annual variability in the timing of eel migration initiation and peak into freshwaters, this variability is predictable according to differences in environmental conditions. As many of these conditions associated with annual variability in temperature and precipitation then climate change has the potential to shift these migration timings.

Item Type:Article
ISSN:0018-8158
Uncontrolled Keywords:Anguillid; Phenology; Migration; Red list species
Group:Faculty of Science & Technology
ID Code:40164
Deposited By: Symplectic RT2
Deposited On:15 Jul 2024 15:36
Last Modified:10 Dec 2024 11:17

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