Academic literature on the topic 'Migratory contingents'

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Journal articles on the topic "Migratory contingents"

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Secor, David H., Michael H. P. O’Brien, Benjamin I. Gahagan, Dewayne A. Fox, Amanda L. Higgs, and Jessica E. Best. "Multiple spawning run contingents and population consequences in migratory striped bass Morone saxatilis." PLOS ONE 15, no. 11 (2020): e0242797. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242797.

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Multiple spawning run contingents within the same population can experience varying demographic fates that stabilize populations through the portfolio effect. Multiple spawning run contingents (aka run timing groups) are reported here for the first time for striped bass, an economically important coastal species, which is well known for plastic estuarine and shelf migration behaviors. Adult Hudson River Estuary striped bass (n = 66) were tagged and tracked with acoustic transmitters from two known spawning reaches separated by 90 km. Biotelemetry recaptures for two years demonstrated that each river reach was associated with separate contingents. Time series of individual spawning phenologies were examined via nonparametric dynamic time warping and revealed two dominant time series centroids, each associated with a separate spawning reach. The lower spawning reach contingent occurred earlier than the higher reach contingent in 2017 but not in 2018. The majority (89%) of returning adults in 2018 showed the same contingent behaviors exhibited in 2017. Spawning contingents may have been cued differently by temperatures, where warming lagged 1-week at the higher reach in comparison to the lower reach. The two contingents exhibited similar Atlantic shelf migration patterns with strong summer fidelity to Massachusetts Bay and winter migrations to the southern US Mid-Atlantic Bight. Still, in 2017, differing times of departure into nearby shelf waters likely caused the early lower reach contingent to experience substantially higher mortality than the later upper reach contingent. Anecdotal evidence suggests that higher fishing effort is exerted on the early-departing individuals as they first enter shelf fisheries. Thus, as in salmon, multiple spawning units can lead to differential demographic outcomes, potentially stabilizing overall population dynamics.
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Gillanders, Bronwyn M., Christopher Izzo, Zoë A. Doubleday, and Qifeng Ye. "Partial migration: growth varies between resident and migratory fish." Biology Letters 11, no. 3 (2015): 20140850. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2014.0850.

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Partial migration occurs in many taxa and ecosystems and may confer survival benefits. Here, we use otolith chemistry data to determine whether fish from a large estuarine system were resident or migratory, and then examine whether contingents display differences in modelled growth based on changes in width of otolith growth increments. Sixty-three per cent of fish were resident based on Ba : Ca of otoliths, with the remainder categorized as migratory, with both contingents distributed across most age/size classes and both sexes, suggesting population-level bet hedging. Migrant fish were in slightly better condition than resident fish based on Fulton's K condition index. Migration type (resident versus migratory) was 56 times more likely to explain variation in growth than a model just incorporating year- and age-related growth trends. While average growth only varied slightly between resident and migratory fish, year-to-year variation was significant. Such dynamism in growth rates likely drives persistence of both life-history types. The complex relationships in growth between contingents suggest that management of species exhibiting partial migration is challenging, especially in a world subject to a changing climate.
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Roloson, Scott D., Sean J. Landsman, Raymond Tana, et al. "Otolith microchemistry and acoustic telemetry reveal anadromy in non-native rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) in Prince Edward Island, Canada." Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 77, no. 7 (2020): 1117–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/cjfas-2019-0229.

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This study examined the migratory patterns of introduced rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) in three rivers in Prince Edward Island, Canada, using acoustic telemetry and otolith microchemistry. Only 6% of acoustically tagged fish in three river systems left coastal embayments. A cohort of rainbow trout in all three rivers entered saline waters. Habitat use differed among migrants in the three rivers, as Montague River fish occupied estuary habitat (mean 20.79 PSU) more often than West River and Dunk River fish that tended to occupy both riverine tidal (mean 1.27 and 4.29 PSU, respectively) and freshwater habitats (<0.5 PSU), particularly during summer months (July and August). A second cohort of rainbow trout remained exclusively in fresh water. Migratory individuals were more likely to arise from anadromous mothers, but freshwater mothers produced migratory offspring in all sites. Migratory individuals were significantly larger than nonmigratory freshwater residents. This study suggests that partial residency was the primary strategy, with prominent tidal occupation, while secondary marine and freshwater contingents were included in the full range of successful migratory strategies.
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Crook, D. A., D. J. Buckle, Q. Allsop, et al. "Use of otolith chemistry and acoustic telemetry to elucidate migratory contingents in barramundi Lates calcarifer." Marine and Freshwater Research 68, no. 8 (2017): 1554. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/mf16177.

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Migration is a fundamental aspect of the life history of many fish and must be well understood for targeted conservation and management. We used acoustic telemetry and otolith 87Sr/86Sr analysis, in conjunction with annual ageing, to study intraspecific variation in barramundi Lates calcarifer migration in the Northern Territory, Australia. Acoustic transmitters were implanted into 25 barramundi (420–1010-mm total length (TL); median 510mm TL) from freshwater reaches of the South Alligator River and their movements tracked over >2 years. 87Sr/86Sr transect analysis was also conducted on otoliths of 67 barramundi from the Daly, Mary, South Alligator and Roper rivers. Acoustic telemetry showed that most fish remained in fresh water across wet and dry seasons. Higher rates of movement occurred during the wet season and a minority of fish moved into the estuary during high flows. Otolith chemistry analyses revealed high diversity in salinity histories among individuals. We integrated the telemetry and otolith chemistry data to examine migration as a function of the stage of sexual development, and have proposed a revised life history model that identifies three migratory contingents. We conclude that anthropogenic disturbance, including modified river hydrology, has the potential to alter the frequency of life history contingents in barramundi populations.
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Pautzke, Sarah M., Martha E. Mather, John T. Finn, Linda A. Deegan, and Robert M. Muth. "Seasonal Use of a New England Estuary by Foraging Contingents of Migratory Striped Bass." Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 139, no. 1 (2010): 257–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1577/t08-222.1.

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Tzeng, Wann-Nian, Yoshiyuki Iizuka, Jen-Chieh Shiao, Yoshiaki Yamada, and Hideo P. Oka. "Identification and growth rates comparison of divergent migratory contingents of Japanese eel (Anguilla japonica)." Aquaculture 216, no. 1-4 (2003): 77–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0044-8486(02)00053-4.

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Petitgas, Pierre, Dave H. Secor, Ian McQuinn, Geir Huse, and Nancy Lo. "Stock collapses and their recovery: mechanisms that establish and maintain life-cycle closure in space and time." ICES Journal of Marine Science 67, no. 9 (2010): 1841–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/icesjms/fsq082.

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Abstract Petitgas, P., Secor, D. H., McQuinn, I., Huse, G., and Lo, N. 2010. Stock collapses and their recovery: mechanisms that establish and maintain life-cycle closure in space and time. – ICES Journal of Marine Science, 67: 1841–1848. Experience has established that the recovery of many collapsed stocks takes much longer than predicted by traditional fishery population models. We put forward the hypothesis that stock collapse is associated with disruption of the biological mechanisms that sustain life-cycle closure of intrapopulation contingents. Based on a review of case studies of nine marine fish stocks, we argue that stock collapses not only involve biomass loss, but also the loss of structural elements related to life-cycle diversity (contingents), as well as the breakdown of socially transmitted traditions (through a curtailed age range). Behavioural mechanisms associated with these structural elements could facilitate recovery of depleted populations. Migratory behaviour is argued to relate to phenotypic plasticity and the persistence of migration routes to social interactions. The case studies represent collapsed or depleted populations that recovered after a relatively short period (striped bass, capelin), after more than a decade (herring and sardine), or not at all (anchovy, cod). Contrasting the population dynamics from these stocks leads us to make a distinction between a depleted and a collapsed population, where, in addition to biomass depletion, the latter includes damage to contingent structure or space-use pattern. We also propose a mechanism to explain how lost habitats are recolonized.
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Elsdon, T. S., and B. M. Gillanders. "Identifying migratory contingents of fish by combining otolith Sr:Ca with temporal collections of ambient Sr:Ca concentrations." Journal of Fish Biology 69, no. 3 (2006): 643–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1095-8649.2006.01136.x.

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Fraile, Igaratza, Haritz Arrizabalaga, Josu Santiago, et al. "Otolith chemistry as an indicator of movements of albacore (Thunnus alalunga) in the North Atlantic Ocean." Marine and Freshwater Research 67, no. 7 (2016): 1002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/mf15097.

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Albacore (Thunnus alalunga) in the North Atlantic Ocean is currently managed as a single well-mixed stock, although this assumption remains contentious. We measured stable isotopes (δ13C and δ18O) and trace elements (Mg, Mn, Sr, Ba) in otoliths of albacore collected from two feeding grounds, namely the Bay of Biscay and Atlantic offshore waters, and compared them among sampling locations and life history stages. Measurements in otolith core, post-core and edge were used to determine whether albacore from these two regions have the same nursery origin and migratory patterns. We found no clear evidence of distinct nursery grounds based on otolith core chemistry, but Sr:Ca and Mg:Ca were different in the post-core portions of albacore from the two locations, suggesting residency in different regions during the early juvenile stage. Otolith edge chemistry, particularly stable isotopes and Sr:Ca, proved to be a valuable tool for classifying individuals to their capture locations. Annual cycles of Sr:Ca ratios were visible along life history transects, likely reflecting migratory patterns between water masses of differing salinity, but the timing of Sr:Ca cycles differed between the two groups. Differentiation in trace element concentrations in the otolith post-core and the timing of Sr:Ca cycles suggest the occurrence of two migratory contingents of albacore in the north-east Atlantic Ocean.
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Mai, Ana Cecilia Giacometti, and João Paes Vieira. "Review and consideration on habitat use, distribution and life history of Lycengraulis grossidens (Agassiz, 1829) (Actinopterygii, Clupeiformes, Engraulididae)." Biota Neotropica 13, no. 3 (2013): 121–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s1676-06032013000300015.

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In this paper, we present a summary of the current knowledge of Lycengraulis grossidens, a widely distributed coastal fish that occurs from Belize to Argentina. This species is abundant in estuaries along the Southwest Atlantic Coast and is important for recreational fishing, and as bycatch of shrimp fisheries. We compiled data available on taxonomy, phylogeny, ecology, fisheries and organized conceptually the life cycle of the species according to modern estuarine-use classification. Our review showed that along its geographic distribution and inside some particular environments (i.e., estuaries and costal lagoons) the species have been classified in a variety of ways in order to describe the remarkable complexity of habitat use that varies from freshwater resident, anadromous, marine migrant, estuarine resident, marine stragglers, catadromous to semi-catadromous. We conclude that L. grossidens is able to reproduce either in freshwater or estuarine water and postulate that it has a high plasticity in habitat use and life history, with migratory and resident contingents in the same local population. There seems to be a latitudinal change in migratory behavior of this species along the South America Coast, prevailing anadromous or semi-anadromous pattern at higher latitudes and marine migrants at the tropical northeast coast of Brazil.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Migratory contingents"

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Scherer, Adriano. "Estrutura e aspectos fitogeográficos de remanescentes florestais na Restinga Sulbrasileira." reponame:Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da UFRGS, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10183/17479.

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As restingas constituem um mosaico de ambientes presentes nas planícies costeiras brasileiras. Sua vegetação se desenvolve em areias quartzosas e engloba variadas formações, de comunidades herbáceas de dunas até florestas. A restinga sulbrasileira se estende entre as latitudes 28°30'S, no estado de Santa Catarina, e 33°45'S, no extremo sul do Rio Grande do Sul. Esta tese visou compreender, em escala geográfica mais ampla, a influência de variáveis ambientais sobre a estrutura e composição dos componentes arbóreo e herbáceo-subarbustivo nas florestas da restinga sulbrasileira. Em 15 remanescentes florestais distribuídos nessa região, realizou-se a caracterização florística e fitossociológica do componente arbóreo e verificou-se a relação entre diversidade, latitude e variáveis climáticas. O levantamento do componente arbóreo foi feito em áreas de 0,1 ha em cada remanescente, subdivididas em 10 parcelas de 10 x 10 m. Todas as árvores com DAP>= 3,0 cm foram registradas. Com os parâmetros estruturais usuais em fitossociologia foi feita uma análise da variância, comparando-se os remanescentes. Também foi avaliada a composição do solo superficial (20 cm de profundidade) dos remanescentes. Os dados de riqueza e informações sobre temperatura atmosférica e precipitação foram empregados em análises de regressão para verificar sua relação com a latitude. Realizou-se ainda uma Análise de Agrupamento para avaliar a similaridade florística entre as áreas. A composição e estrutura do componente herbáceo-subarbustivo sob diferentes níveis de uso por gado bovino nos remanescentes também foi estudada. A fitossociologia da sinúsia herbácea-subarbustiva foi feita em 10 parcelas de 1,0 m² e a florística, nas 10 parcelas de 10 x 10 m. Registrou-se a intensidade de uso por gado através de visualização direta ou vestígios dos animais. Foram feitas análise da variância e Análise de Coordenadas Principais com índices estruturais da sinúsia herbácea-subarbustiva nos remanescentes, comparando-os quanto à intensidade de uso por gado bovino. Registraram-se 116 espécies arbóreas no total, porém a riqueza variou de 11 a 43 espécies por remanescente. Espécies provenientes por mais de uma rota de imigração e pelo corredor atlântico contribuíram com 43% e 39% dessa flora, respectivamente. A diversidade arbórea variou de 1,372 a 3,175 nats/ind. O componente arbóreo apresentou densidade entre 1.520 e 3.830 ind./ha, porte baixo e predomínio de diâmetros pequenos. Constataram-se diferenças significativas na estrutura do componente arbóreo entre alguns remanescentes. Essas diferenças podem estar relacionadas a variações nas condições de fertilidade, acidez e teores de alumínio no solo. Houve uma distinção florística no componente arbóreo entre o norte e o centro-sul da restinga sulbrasileira, além de gradientes de riqueza e diversidade no sentido norte-sul relacionados às condições de temperatura e precipitação. Para a sinúsia herbácea-subarbustiva, constataram-se diferenças significativas no conjunto de variáveis estruturais (cobertura, altura e medidas de diversidade) entre remanescentes sob níveis médio e alto de uso por gado bovino. Sob alta intensidade de uso por gado bovino, a sinúsia herbácea-subarbustiva apresenta menores valores de altura, riqueza, diversidade e equabilidade e alta dominância de poucas espécies. O estudo destes componentes permitiu verificar que variáveis edáficas, climáticas e antrópicas condicionam a estrutura florestal em diferentes intensidades e/ou escalas espaciais.<br>(Structure and phytogeographic features of forest remnants in south Brazilian restinga). Restingas comprise a mosaic of environments present in Brazilian coastal plains. Its vegetation grows in quartzarenic sands and includes several formations, from dune herb communities to forests. South Brazilian restinga extents between latitudes 28°30'S, in Santa Catarina state, and 33°45'S, in the extreme southern of Rio Grande do Sul. This thesis aimed to investigate, in broader geographical scale, the influence of environmental variables on structure and composition of tree and herb-subshrubby components in south Brazilian restinga forests. We analysed the floristic and phytosociological patterns of tree component and the relation among diversity, latitude and climatic variables into 15 forest remnants distributed in this region. Tree component survey was carried out in 0.1 ha areas, subdivided in 10 x 10 m plots. All trees with DBH >= 3.0 cm were sampled. With structural parameters usually estimated in phytosociology an ANOVA was performed to seek for relations among the remnants. The composition of superficial soil (20 cm deep) was also assessed in the remants. Richness, atmospheric temperature and rainfall data were employed in regression analyses to verify its relation to latitude. A Cluster Analysis was also performed to evaluate floristic similarity among areas. Composition and structure of herb-subshrubby component under different levels of cattle usage in remnants was studied as well. Phytosociology of herb-subshrubby synusiae was carried out in 10 plots of 1.0 m² and the floristics was accomplished in those 10 x 10 m plots. The intensity of cattle usage was registered by direct observation or animal traces. We performed an ANOVA and Principal Coordinates Analysis with herb-subshrubby structural data among remnants to compare them in relation to cattle usage levels. We sampled 116 tree species, but remnant richness varied from 11 to 43 species. Species from more than one immigration route and from the Atlantic route contributed with 43% and 39% of this flora, respectively. Diversity of trees varied from 1.372 to 3.175 nats/ind. Tree synusiae had density between 1,520 and 3,830 ind./ha, low height and predominance of small diameters. Significant differences in tree component structure were observed among some remnants. These differences may be related to variations in conditions of soil fertility, acidity and aluminium content. A floristic distinction between the northern and the central-southern portion of south Brazilian restinga was verified, besides richness and diversity gradients towards north-south associated to temperature and rainfall conditions. For herb-subshrubby synusiae, significant differences were observed in the set of structural variables (coverage, height and diversity measures) among remnants under moderate and high cattle-using levels. Under high cattle-using levels, herb-subshrubby synusiae shows lower values of height, richness, diversity and eveness, and higher dominance of few species. The study of these components permited to verify that soil, climatic and anthropic variables determined forest structure in different intensities and/or spatial scales.
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Book chapters on the topic "Migratory contingents"

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"Challenges for Diadromous Fishes in a Dynamic Global Environment." In Challenges for Diadromous Fishes in a Dynamic Global Environment, edited by Thomas M. Grothues, Kenneth W. Able, Jacque Carter, and Timothy W. Arienti. American Fisheries Society, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.47886/9781934874080.ch9.

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&lt;em&gt;Abstract&lt;/em&gt;.-Telemetered adult striped bass &lt;em&gt;Morone saxatilis &lt;/em&gt;(&lt;em&gt;n &lt;/em&gt;= 170) in two small nonnatal U.S. Atlantic coast estuaries, the Mullica River-Great Bay in New Jersey and the Saco River in Maine, displayed a variety of movements relative to migration and habitat use. Individual presence in both systems ranged from hours to many months from spring through fall but seldom during the winter. Some made upriver runs during the presumed spawning season. An absence of eggs, larvae, or juvenile stage striped bass or suitable spawning grounds suggests that fish utilizing both systems are members of migrant contingents originating elsewhere. In both systems, some seasonal residents occupied individual "home" ranges throughout the salinity gradient, but others were plastic in their behavior and utilized several sites or visited the estuary either briefly or for a whole season in different years. Movement of fish between study sites and recaptures away from them indicated wide dispersal during time away from the study estuaries. The above supports the idea that migratory and seasonal residence behaviors of migrant striped bass are not compulsive or predictive but reactive or learned. Despite long seasonal occurrence in these small estuaries by some individuals, none appeared to become full-time residents. Small estuaries may lack the year-round resources for spawning and feeding to enable this. However, the observed behaviors could promote recolonization of spawning stocks with residents in larger restored rivers and estuaries where they have been previously extirpated. Localized fishery depletion of small estuaries could occur quickly but would be temporary in the absence of stock wide depletion.
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Sadowski-Smith, Claudia. "Highly Skilled and Marriage Migrants in Arizona." In New Immigrant Whiteness. NYU Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9781479847730.003.0003.

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This chapter discusses the results of my interviews with post-USSR immigrants in Phoenix, Arizona, which place male-dominated highly skilled and female-dominated marriage migration in the context of scholarship on adaptation and return migration. The two migratory forms have been spurred by the interests of US men in creating monoracial families and by the immense growth in the number of contingent academic positions at US institutions of higher learning. Their differential legal status upon arrival provides post-Soviet marriage and highly skilled migrants with divergent access to economic, social, and cultural forms of US citizenship, community building, and opportunities for return. Highly skilled migrants create middle-class lives, appear less interested in participating in a coethnic community, and maintain limited physical transnational connections, while marriage migrants face downward mobility and dependency, experience greater difficulty connecting to other post-Soviet migrants, and more often consider returning. While they are immediately provided with membership in their husbands’ middle-class lives, the globalized form of US whiteness that marriage migrants are assigned even before they leave their countries of origin creates heightened expectations of their complete assimilation to a middle-class whiteness at the cost of their and often their children’s bicultural and transnational identities.
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