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Climate and human exploitation have regulated Atlantic salmon populations in the River Spey, Scotland, over the last 2000 years

Climate and human exploitation have regulated Atlantic salmon populations in the River Spey, Scotland, over the last 2000 years
Climate and human exploitation have regulated Atlantic salmon populations in the River Spey, Scotland, over the last 2000 years
Historical salmon catch records suggest that climatic variability, and more recently human exploitation, control patterns of abundance in Atlantic salmon populations. We present the first long-term (2000-year) reconstruction of Atlantic Salmon population variations based on a Marine Derived Nutrient (MDN) lake sediment record. Our record is constructed from nitrogen isotopes (δ15N) measured from a lake sediment core, which we compare with an escapement index (EI) derived from historic net catch data on major Scottish salmon rivers. We used an isotope mixing model to demonstrate that the N isotope values are likely enriched with MDN and demonstrate that Loch Insh sediments are enriched compared with a control site (Loch Vaa) that has never had exposure to salmon. We demonstrate that current adult spawner returns are around half that of historic values prior to major human exploitation. Before the onset of widespread human exploitation and habitat degradation, large fluctuations in salmon abundance are attributed to variations in North Atlantic sea surface temperature. While our data support published reconstructions of declining Atlantic salmon stocks in Northwest European rivers over the last 1000 years, rather than point to a solely human cause, the human impact appears to be overprinted on larger-scale changes in marine habitat occurring at the transition from the warmer Medieval Climatic Anomaly (MCA) to the cooler Little Ice Age (LIA).
0959-6836
Sear, David
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Langdon, Peter
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Leng, Melanie
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Edwards, Mary
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Heaton, Tim
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Langdon, Catherine
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Leyland, Julian
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Sear, David
ccd892ab-a93d-4073-a11c-b8bca42ecfd3
Langdon, Peter
95b97671-f9fe-4884-aca6-9aa3cd1a6d7f
Leng, Melanie
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Edwards, Mary
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Heaton, Tim
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Langdon, Catherine
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Leyland, Julian
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Sear, David, Langdon, Peter, Leng, Melanie, Edwards, Mary, Heaton, Tim, Langdon, Catherine and Leyland, Julian (2022) Climate and human exploitation have regulated Atlantic salmon populations in the River Spey, Scotland, over the last 2000 years. The Holocene. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Historical salmon catch records suggest that climatic variability, and more recently human exploitation, control patterns of abundance in Atlantic salmon populations. We present the first long-term (2000-year) reconstruction of Atlantic Salmon population variations based on a Marine Derived Nutrient (MDN) lake sediment record. Our record is constructed from nitrogen isotopes (δ15N) measured from a lake sediment core, which we compare with an escapement index (EI) derived from historic net catch data on major Scottish salmon rivers. We used an isotope mixing model to demonstrate that the N isotope values are likely enriched with MDN and demonstrate that Loch Insh sediments are enriched compared with a control site (Loch Vaa) that has never had exposure to salmon. We demonstrate that current adult spawner returns are around half that of historic values prior to major human exploitation. Before the onset of widespread human exploitation and habitat degradation, large fluctuations in salmon abundance are attributed to variations in North Atlantic sea surface temperature. While our data support published reconstructions of declining Atlantic salmon stocks in Northwest European rivers over the last 1000 years, rather than point to a solely human cause, the human impact appears to be overprinted on larger-scale changes in marine habitat occurring at the transition from the warmer Medieval Climatic Anomaly (MCA) to the cooler Little Ice Age (LIA).

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HOL-21-0176-R1_accepted
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Accepted/In Press date: 11 March 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 456168
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/456168
ISSN: 0959-6836
PURE UUID: 69c8c723-b78e-494b-ab89-e4e77904a58a
ORCID for David Sear: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0191-6179
ORCID for Peter Langdon: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2724-2643
ORCID for Mary Edwards: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3490-6682
ORCID for Julian Leyland: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3419-9949

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Date deposited: 26 Apr 2022 15:13
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:04

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Contributors

Author: David Sear ORCID iD
Author: Peter Langdon ORCID iD
Author: Melanie Leng
Author: Mary Edwards ORCID iD
Author: Tim Heaton
Author: Julian Leyland ORCID iD

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