Title: RIVER SLANEY: Potential for Sea Trout Development
1RIVER SLANEY Potential for Sea Trout
Development?
- Slaney River Trust
-
- Association of Rivers Trusts
- Seminar Bunclody 19 20th February 2007
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3Symposium Themes
- Genetics Life History
- Stocks Fisheries
- Ecology Population Dynamics
- Management Conservation
4- 1. Importance Value
- 2. Key Issues
- 3. Management Challenges
- 4. Potential in Slaney
5- Sea trout are potentially a very valuable sport
fish species. They have, for too long, been
considered a poor relative of the salmon. The
management and development and promotion of these
fisheries demands a fresh, dynamic approach from
both the Fisheries Boards and the owners of these
fisheries. - Inland Fisheries Strategies for Management
Development. - Central Fisheries Board. December 1986
6SOCIO-ECONOMIC IMPORTANCE VALUE
- An Historical Perspective
- Pre-1970
- Post-1970
- Practical Advantages
- for fishermen
- for fishery managers
7The decline of the River Wye salmon catch
8Angling advantages of sea troutthey can be
caught in big rivers
9. and in small rivers
10 ..in lakes
11. in estuaries - by the rods
12and by the nets also.
13including our few remaining heritage
instruments such as the coracle nets on the
Tywi and Teifi
14. and in the sea
15.they can be caught in daylight - on fly
16 on spinner
17 and with worm
18. they can also be caught at night on the fly
19Night here means. not just at sunset
20 nor even just at twilight
21 but in pitch-black and total darkness also
22. angling success can be quantitative
23.or qualitative
24. or both
25. other benefits to the angler are.
- Presents the true angler with more challenges and
opportunities - Comes naturally packed in a range of more
convenient sizes for the freezer! - Tastes nicer than salmon or brown trout
- Provides an opportunity to meet a far better
class of angler!
26Method of Rod-Capture
27Practical Advantages
- Sporting attractions
- Widespread distribution
- Catchment utilisation
- Coastal migrations
- Up-stream movements on low flows
- Regeneration from resident brown trout
- Robust life-history
28The importance of sea trout in smaller rivers
29Robust Life History
- 1- 4 year old smolt age groups
- 0 - 3 maiden sea-age groups
- multiple repeat spawning visits to freshwater for
up to 12 consecutive years. - c. 25 survival from kelts
- High potential maximum lifetime egg deposition by
repeat spawners. - Less vulnerable to cataclysmic events affecting
any single year class or age group of fish in
either river or sea - Adult size-range (8 oz - 24 lb) allows fuller
use of available nursery stream and spawning
gravels.
30KEY ISSUES 1.
- What is a sea trout?
- In a nutshell..!
31.What is it that determines if a juvenile trout
parr is destined to become
32. a small resident brown trout
33.or undergo the smolt transformation that
pre-adapts it to life in the sea
34.to become a larger migratory sea trout?
35Is it
- Nature or nurture?
- Genetics or environment?
- Or is it
- A Bit of both?
36Key Issue 2 The Marine Phase
- What happens to sea trout when they go the sea?
- Migration distances?
- Over-lapping feeding ranges?
- Differences in behaviour of
- different life-stages?
- different river stocks?
- Survival return rates?
- Illegal and inadvertent capture?
- Exploitation rates?
- Coastal mixed stocks?
37Do we have any mixed-stock fisheries for sea
trout?
38Are there any mixed stocks in the Irish Sea?
39Key ISSUE 3 CONSERVATION
- Are our stocks healthy?
- Is current level of exploitation sustainable?
- What needs to be done to maintain the fishery
- . in quantitative terms?
- . In qualitative terms?
- Are existing stock conservation measures adequate
and appropriate
40Conserving .0sw finnock. A worthy catch or
irresponsible fish-mongering?
41The benefits of finnock conservation are.
more bigger fish next year!
42Conservation of . MSW Sea Trout?
43CONSERVATION OF PREVIOUS SPAWNERS
44ISSUE 4 Global Warming Climate Change?
45 changes in temperature rainfall patterns
46WHAT ARE THE CHALLENGES?
- Integrated management of the sea trout / brown
trout complex as a single biological unit - Recognise and safeguard the enormous biodiversity
(including genetic diversity) present in Salmo
trutta - Identify true stock status and maintain
exploitation at a sustainable level - Define and determine robust Biological Reference
Points - Conserve qualitative stock components
- Climate Change (more brown trout and fewer sea
trout?) - Recognise Importance of long-term studies
- Fill the many tactical gaps in our knowledge
- Investigate the marine phase of sea trout life
history. - Think Sea Trout Do not take them for granted.
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48SLANEYSEA TROUT POTENTIAL?
- Establishing the potential
- Realising the potential
- Maximising/optimising the potential
- Maintaining the potential
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53A Sea Trout Strategy for the Slaney?
- Identify main spawning and nursery areas for sea
trout (and brown trout). - Look after small tributaries and sub-tributaries.
- Reduce unsustainable selective fishing pressure
in tidal waters by net fishery - Implement sea trout conservation strategy with
properly joined-up Rules Regulations for the
entire river - Improve collection of catch-data from the rod and
net fisheries to establish a baseline and
monitor change. - Undertake a structured scale reading
investigation to establish structure and
composition of stock/catch to establish a
baseline and monitor change. - Encourage anglers to fish for sea trout..
properly! - THINK. IRISH. SEA TROUT!