Íslenskar landbúnaðarrannsóknir


Íslenskar landbúnaðarrannsóknir - 01.09.1978, Side 31

Íslenskar landbúnaðarrannsóknir - 01.09.1978, Side 31
THE ATLANTIC SALMON IN ICELAND 29 bottom with coarser material than salmon parr do. Besides, the brown trout parr are found on shallower water and closer to the river banks than the salmon parr, and feed more on terrestrial animals in the drift than salmon parr do. Tómasson (1975) and Karlström (1971) found this to be true in the river Ulfarsá and river Laxá in Adaldalur. Egglishaw (1970), who studied pro- duction of salmon and trout in the Shel- ligan Burn in Scotland, states that the stream would presumably produce more salmon if the trout were eliminated, but not as much as its present total yield of salmon smolts and trout, because 30% of the trout food is of terrestrial origin. Power (1973) found a different dis- tribution pattern of salmonid species in small streams in northern Norway. He maintains that the char occupied „head- waters and cold streams, trout warmer tributaries and downstream parts of rivers too small for salmon,and salmon the lower reaches of rivers.“ The char fry emerged earliest and had a slight advantage in size over 0+ parr of salmon and trout. This pattern of distribution might also exist in Iceland in similar rivers. An experiment was carried out in 1976 in a Californian standard raceway at the Kollafjördur Fish Farm to study competi- tion between salmon and Arctic char fry in a pond environment (Alexandersdóttir 1978). A control was run in another race- way with salmon fry only. The bottom of the raceways was about 2lz mud and V3 gravel. The experiment was started in June and ended in September. The sal- mon fry concentrated in the gravel area, whereas the char fry were evenly distri- buted throughout the raceway. No food was given. The char grew fastest and had less mortality than the salmon. The in- stantaneous rate of growth of the char fry was 6.59, of the salmon fry 0.19, and of the control group 2.35. At the close of the experiment the average length of the char was 6.6. cm, the salmon 4.5 cm, and the control group 5.6 cm. The salmon fry had been fed before the experiment conr- menced. Thomas (1962) studied the feeding habits of salmon, trout, and eel in the River Teify in western Wales. He found that there is a close resemblance between the dietary habits ofsalmon and trout parr of the same age, but an appreciable differ- ence between the diet of the eel and the other species. Sinha and Jones (1975) also have studied the food of eel, salmon, and trout in western Wales. They maintain that the eel have ,,in general, much the same diet as salmonids and must be re- garded as competitors for available food.“ The eel can thus be expected to compete with salmon for food in the rivers in south- ern and western Iceland, where they are found mainly. Maitland (1965) studied the feeding habits of threespined stickleback and other species in the River Endrick in Scotland. He found that the diet of the threespined stickleback overlapped to a significant degree with that of the other species studied, among them salmon and trout fry. Capacity of the nursery areas Fort and Brayshaw (1961) state that young fish in the river require „maximum wetted perimeter. The lower the flow in the river the less food and the less cover is there for them.“ Hynes (1972) states that
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