Journal of Fish Biology (2012) 81, 456–478
doi:10.1111/j.1095-8649.2012.03342.x, available online at wileyonlinelibrary.com
Partial migration in fishes: causes and consequences
B. B. Chapman*†, K. Hulthén*, J. Brodersen*‡, P. A. Nilsson*,
C. Skov§, L.-A. Hansson* and C. Brönmark*
*Department of Biology, Lund University, Ecology Building, 223 62 Lund, Sweden and
§National Institute of Aquatic Resources, Technical University of Denmark (DTU), Vejlsøvej
39, 8600 Silkeborg, Denmark
Partial migration, where only some individuals from a population migrate, has been widely reported
in a diverse range of animals. In this paper, what is known about the causes and consequences of
partial migration in fishes is reviewed. Firstly, the ultimate and proximate drivers of partial migration
are reflected upon: what ecological factors can shape the evolution of migratory dimorphism? How is
partial migration maintained over evolutionary timescales? What proximate mechanisms determine
whether an individual is migratory or remains resident? Following this, the consequences of partial
migration are considered, in an ecological and evolutionary context, and also in an applied sense.
Here it is argued that understanding the concept of partial migration is crucial for fisheries and
ecosystem managers, and can provide information for conservation strategies. The review concludes
with a reflection on the future opportunities in this field, and the avenues of research that are likely
to be fruitful to shed light on the enduring puzzle of partial migration in fishes. 2012 The Authors
Journal of Fish Biology 2012 The Fisheries Society of the British Isles
Key words: anadromy; catadromy; contingent; intraspecific variation; life-history diversity.
Migration is perhaps nature’s most spectacular event. Each year billions of animals
set out on a seasonal journey to find food or mates, avoid predators or escape severe
winter weather conditions. These cyclical movements occur over a vast array of spatial and temporal scales and have mystified and inspired mankind for >2000 years
(Aristotle, c. 350 BC). The intrinsic interest in migration has generated a great deal
of research aimed at understanding the causes and consequences of this phenomenon
(Alerstam, 1990; Dingle, 1996; Newton, 2008). Understanding migration is important as it is a powerful force shaping the distribution of animals across space and
time, and influences processes at all scales, from individuals to entire ecosystems.
Unravelling the mystery of migration is therefore critical for a broad understanding
of ecological and evolutionary processes, in addition to being central to many applied
issues, such as species conservation and fisheries stock management.
Migration is a heterogeneous phenomenon, varying both between and within
species. Arguably, the most common form of migration is known as partial migration
†Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.: +46 736 643 608; email: ben.chapman@
biol.lu.se
‡Present address: Department of Fish Ecology and Evolution, EAWAG Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Center of Ecology, Evolution and Biochemistry, Seestrasse 79, CH-6047 Kastanienbaum,
Switzerland
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(Chapman et al., 2011a). Partial migration occurs when just a fraction of a population migrates and the remainder stay resident, and has been widely documented
across a wide range of taxa, including fishes ( Jonsson et al., 1993; Chapman et al.,
2012). Partial migration in fishes has long been recognized amongst salmonid species,
where some individuals migrate to the sea from fresh water (anadromy) and others
remain resident in their natal streams (Jonsson & Jonsson, 1993). Recent reports,
however, have revealed that partial migration is extremely widespread, including not
just anadromous but also catadromous, potamodromous and oceanodromous fishes.
It is also widely distributed across orders, with examples in many species from Perciformes to Pleuronectiformes (Table I; Chapman et al., 2012). Many studies now
show that populations of fishes can contain both migratory and resident individuals,
and that partial migration occurs in a variety of habitats and spatial scales.
Whilst the number of studies in this area continues to grow, many of these studies merely describe patterns of migratory dimorphism, or even simply show that
it occurs for a given population, and offer little analysis into the factors that promote this fascinating behavioural variation, or assess the potential consequences. The
proximate and ultimate mechanisms underlying partial migration in fishes are vague,
and knowledge of the ecological and evolutionary consequences of partial migration is extremely limited. Partial migration also provides a real opportunity to gain
an insight into physiological and behavioural migratory adaptations and is critically
important in developing management strategies for stocks, as many commercially
important species are partial migrants.
This paper reviews what is currently known about the causes and consequences of
partial migration with a special focus on fishes. It begins with an introduction to partial migration, and then considers the causes and consequences of partial migration.
This review firstly assesses the ultimate and proximate causes of partial migration:
what ecological factors may be important as drivers of migratory dimorphism and
what are the proximate control mechanisms of migration? Following this, the conundrum of how partial migration can be maintained over evolutionary time spans is
discussed. Next, the ecological and evolutionary consequences of partial migration
in fishes are considered, along with the applied implications of partial migration in
the context of conservation, biomanipulation and fisheries management. The paper
concludes with a reflection upon future opportunities in partial migration research,
both in the context of technological advances and also research areas of interest that
perhaps deserve greater attention over the coming years.
WHAT IS PARTIAL MIGRATION?
A multitude of terminology has been used to describe migratory dimorphism in
fishes (Secor & Kerr, 2009), which has hampered understanding and synthesis of this
field in the past. In a sister review from this thematic, the different terms used and
the various forms partial migration can take are discussed (Chapman et al., 2012),
and so these ideas are not addressed in detail here. In this review, the term partial
migration is used to describe the phenomenon where a population is composed of
both migratory and resident individuals.
Partial migration is also diverse: it can be seasonal, and either driven by migrants
breeding or overwintering allopatrically to residents, or alternatively it can arise from
2012 The Authors
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458
Order
Anguilliformes
Common name
Latin name
European eel
Anguilla
anguilla
Acipenseriformes Shortnose
Acipenser
sturgeon
brevirostrum
Berciformes
Orange roughy Hoplostethus
atlanticus
Characiniformes Zulega
Prochilodus
argenteus
Clupeiformes
Atlantic herring Clupea
harengus
Cypriniformes
Roach
Rutilus rutilus
Elasmobranchii
Spiny dogfish
Esociformes
Pike
Gadiformes
Cod
Gasterostiformes Three-spined
stickleback
Osmeriformes
New Zealand
smelt
Migratory type
Partial non-breeding
migration
Partial skipped
breeding migration
Partial skipped
breeding migration
Partial breeding
migration
Partial breeding
migration
Partial non-breeding
migration
Unknown – probably
partial non-breeding
migration
Esox lucius
Partial breeding
migration
Gadus morhua Probably partial
non-breeding
migration
Gasterosteus Partial non-breeding
aculeatus
migration
Retropinna
Partial non-breeding
retropinna
migration
Squalus
acanthius
Migratory
classification
Evidence for
partial migration
Per cent
migrants
Partial catadromy
Otolith microchemistry
Unknown
Partial anadromy
Tag (capture–recapture)
Unknown
Partial
oceanodromy
Partial
potamodromy
Partial
oceanodromy
Partial
potamodromy
Demersal trawling
Unknown
Active and passive
telemetry
Genetic markers and
otolith morphology
Passive telemetry
79
Unknown
High variation
between years
(7–60)
c. 15
Partial
oceanodromy
Tag (capture–recapture)
Partial anadromy
Passive telemetry and
otolith microchemistry
Acoustic telemetry
Unknown
Frequent sampling
(dip-net, trap net)
Shore seining
Unknown
Partial
oceanodromy
Partial anadromy
Partial anadromy
70
Unknown
Proposed ecological
mechanism
Unknown, linked to
body condition
Costly spawning
migration
Costly spawning
migration
Costly spawning
migration
Unknown
Predation risk
Reference
Tsukamoto et al.
(1998)
Dadswell (1979)
Bell et al. (1992)
Godinho & Kynard
(2006)
Ruzzante et al.
(2006)
Chapman et al.
(2011c)
Unknown
McFarlane & King
(2003)
Unknown
Engstedt et al.
(2011)
Cote et al. (2004)
Unknown, some
evidence for a role
of body condition
Unknown, potentially
competition
Unknown
Kitamura et al.
(2006)
Northcote & Ward
(1984)
B. B. CHAPMAN ET AL.
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Journal of Fish Biology 2012 The Fisheries Society of the British Isles, Journal of Fish Biology 2012, 81, 456–478
Table I. A taxonomic summary of partially migratory fishes. For each order a single species example of partial migration is included, and the
migratory type and classification, and the evidence for partial migration are detailed
Order
Common name
Latin name
Migratory type
Perciformes
White perch
Morone americana Partial
non-breeding
migration
Pleuronectiformes
Plaice
Pleuronectes
platessa
Salmoniformes
Rainbow trout
Oncorhynchus
mykiss
Scorpaeniformes
Bear Lake sculpin
Siluriformes
Spotted sorubim
DVM, diel vertical migration.
Migratory
classification
Evidence for
partial migration
Partial
Otolith
semi-anadromy
microchemistry
(i.e. migration
from fresh water
to estuaries)
Partial
Tag (capture–
oceanodromy
recapture)
Per cent
migrants
High variation
between years
(0–96)
Partial anadromy
Cottus extensus
Partial
non-breeding
migration
Partial
non-breeding
migration
Partial DVM
Partial
potamodromy
Estimates of >70
of dispersive
contingent
Frequent sampling 56 in this study
(hook and line,
population
gillnets)
Mid-water and
Unknown
bottom trawls
Pseudoplatystoma
corruscans
Partial breeding
migration
Partial
potamodromy
Active and passive Unknown
telemetry
Proposed
ecological
mechanism
Reference
Food abundance
and availability
Kerr et al. (2009)
Unknown
Dunn & Pawson
(2002)
Fecundity and
mortality
trade-off
Size-dependent
physiological
differences
Unknown
Mcphee et al.
(2007)
Neverman &
Wurtsbaugh
(1994)
Godinho et al.
(2007)
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Table I. Continued
459
460
B. B. CHAPMAN ET AL.
patterns driven by individuals skipping spawning and therefore migration (Chapman
et al., 2011b, 2012; Shaw & Levin, 2011). Partial migration can also occur over
shorter timescales, as many fishes make diel vertical migrations (DVM) in marine
and lacustrine systems (e.g. ciscoes Coregonus spp. Mehner & Kasprzak, 2011).
Here, this is referred to as partial DVM. In a complementary review a thorough taxonomic overview of partial migration in fishes is presented (Chapman et al., 2012);
this review simply summarizes the diverse array of species which display partial
migration to highlight its general importance as a migratory mode amongst fishes
(Table I).
CAUSES OF PARTIAL MIGRATION IN FISHES
The most obvious (and perhaps interesting) question when considering the problem
of partial migration is why only some individuals migrate and others stay resident.
What are the underlying causes of this phenomenon? This question can be answered
on a number of levels: the following section addresses both ultimate and proximate
causation, and additionally considers how this kind of migratory polymorphism can
be maintained within populations over evolutionary timescales.
S TAY O R G O ? I N D I V I D U A L P H E N O T Y P I C D I F F E R E N C E S
A N D T H E E C O L O G I C A L D R I V E R S O F PA RT I A L M I G R AT I O N
Fishes migrate to breed, feed and seek refuge from predators. These descriptive
categories of migration type, however, are not necessarily useful when assessing the
drivers of partial migration in fishes, which often involve trade-offs between multiple
factors. Here, a more mechanistic view of the ultimate ecological drivers of partial
migration is taken, and what factors shape an individual’s ‘decision’ to migrate are
considered. What are the costs and benefits of migration and residency, and what
factors are important in determining these? As individuals are the currency of natural
selection, understanding what drives differences in individual migratory tendency is
paramount and can give clues to the ultimate factors responsible for the evolution of
partial migration. In fishes, studies at this level are not common, but recent work has
begun to compare migratory and resident phenotypes in order to try and understand
which ecological factors promote the evolution of partial migration (Chapman et al.,
2011c; Skov et al., 2011). This approach is more common in the study of partial
migration in other animal groups, particularly in birds (Nilsson et al., 2011). From the
patterns documented in these kinds of studies a variety of hypotheses regarding the
ecological factors underpinning the evolution of partial migration have been developed, which are discussed in the following section of this review. Essentially, all
are based on that migratory behaviour is an adaptive response to temporally (seasonally and daily) fluctuating resources or predators, and that an individual will attempt
to maximize their evolutionary fitness by migrating or remaining resident. Most of
these hypotheses have been developed to understand breeding or non-breeding partial
migration (where individuals migrate to breed or overwinter respectively), but the
same rationale could be equally well applied to partial DVM. In skipped breeding
partial migration, residency is thought to be a strategy in years when individuals
do not have sufficient energy stores to migrate and also invest in gonad and egg
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production, and is hence relatively common in fishes that undertake energetically
costly and long-distance spawning migrations, or migrations between marine and
fresh water that require the capacity to switch between osmoregulatory modes.
Body size and physiological tolerance
A common observation in partial migration studies in fishes is that migrants and
residents differ in body size (ciscoes Coregonus spp.: Mehner & Kasprzak, 2011;
Bear Lake sculpin Cottus extensus Bailey & Bond 1963: Neverman & Wurtsbaugh,
1994; three-spined stickleback Gasterosteus aculeatus L. 1758: Kitamura et al.,
2006). These differences in size can give clues to the drivers of partial migration, although in some cases they are difficult to interpret as multiple hypotheses
can explain why differences in size occur. One example of body size differences
between different contingents is in partially anadromous G. aculeatus. Gasterosteus
aculeatus were observed spawning in a freshwater pond, but only a subset of the
juveniles migrated out to sea (Kitamura et al., 2006). More detailed analysis of the
body length of fish from this population showed a bimodal distribution, with smaller
juveniles migrating and larger fish remaining resident. It is likely that smaller individuals migrate to take advantage of the highly productive marine environment to
increase their growth rate and are forced to take this risky strategy to maximize future
fitness returns. Oceanic migrants often have a much greater growth rate and hence
fecundity (for females), and size is also linked to males having a higher competitive
ability in foraging and reproductive scenarios. Migration to the marine environment,
however, is energetically costly, both in terms of the journey itself and also the physiological changes required to adapt to the saline habitat (Gross, 1987). Hence, this
could be an example of a ‘best of a bad job’ scenario. Evidence in salmonids suggests
that metabolic and growth rates can be important in determining which individuals
become migrants (Jonsson & Jonsson, 1993). Therefore, body size differences which
result in migratory dimorphism could be shaped by intraspecific competitive interactions and be density dependent (the competitive release hypothesis), or alternatively
growth rate could be intrinsic, and be a maternally or genetically transmitted trait.
In the broader partial migration literature, especially in studies of non-breeding
bird partial migration, it has been shown that body size can have a strong influence
upon which individuals migrate, with smaller individuals commonly migrating. A
number of interesting hypotheses have been postulated to explain this pattern. First,
animals with a larger body size are more physiologically resistant to the cold, and
hence residency is less costly to larger individuals (as many birds migrate overwinter to southerly and warmer climes: the thermal tolerance hypothesis: Chapman
et al., 2011b). Second, body size differences could also be suggestive of intraspecific
competition for food or breeding sites (the competitive release hypothesis: Chapman
et al., 2011b, and arrival time hypothesis: Ketterson & Nolan, 1976, respectively).
Studies to test these hypotheses in fishes are lacking, and would potentially be of
great benefit in identifying more general, cross-taxonomic patterns to explain the
phenomenon of partial migration. As previously discussed, the competitive release
hypothesis could potentially apply to partial anadromy in G. aculeatus. Thermal tolerance may be important in partial DVM, or in habitats where temperatures differ
overwinter such as deep lakes and shallow streams. Furthermore, fishes of different
body sizes may experience different metabolic consequences at different temperatures (Mehner & Kasprzak, 2011), and so body size variation may reflect individual
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B. B. CHAPMAN ET AL.
variation in physiology. There is some evidence to support this idea for partial DVM
in juvenile C. extensus (Neverman & Wurtsbaugh, 1994). Within populations of C.
extensus, juveniles of <30 mm in standard length (LS ) vertically migrate 30–40 m
from the bottom of the lake to the epilimnion during the night, whilst larger fish
do not migrate into the water column and instead remain resident at the bottom of
the lake. Stomach content analysis showed that the function of this migration was
not to feed, but potentially instead to utilize the warmer upper waters to increase
digestion rate and hence allow juveniles to feed on consecutive days to maximize
growth rate (Neverman & Wurtsbaugh, 1994). The authors suggest that adult resident
fish, which do not migrate, differ metabolically to juveniles and hence do not benefit in the same way as juveniles from this kind of thermotactic vertical migration.
However, this hypothesis remains to be explicitly tested.
Similarly, intrapopulation variation in individuals’ physiological tolerance to cope
with other environmental extremes such as anoxia may shape patterns of partial
winter migration in potamodromous fishes, although this is rarely considered in such
studies. The fact that often multiple hypotheses can be suggested to explain the body
size differences often evident between fishes of the same species but different migratory strategies highlights the need for carefully planned studies, whereby different
hypotheses generate different predictions that can be tested.
Predation risk–growth potential trade-off
The role of predators in shaping patterns of partial migration has been historically
neglected. This is at least partly because properly assessing the role of predation in
partial migration in fishes is not easy, as predator-induced mortality rates for migrants
v. residents are very difficult to quantify accurately. A number of recent studies into
cyprinid partial migration, however, provide circumstantial evidence that predation
may be of key importance in determining which fish within a species migrate and
which remain resident. For example, in a cross-population comparison of common
bream Abramis brama (L. 1758), Skov et al. (2011) showed that whether an individual migrated out of shallow Danish lakes into the connecting streams could be
predicted by its size-dependent predation vulnerability. Individuals with a high vulnerability of predation risk also had a high probability of migration (Fig. 1). To
quantify predation vulnerability the authors calculated what proportion of the piscivorous predators in the lake could prey successfully upon each A. brama to generate
an individual vulnerability score. This was possible as the predators in this system
(pike Esox lucius L. 1758) are gape-limited, and gape size can be estimated from an
individual’s body size. They also collected data from two lakes that differed in the
predator size distributions and so each individual A. brama’ s predation vulnerability
score was specific to the predator environment in the lake they inhabited. This crosspopulation approach made it possible to focus upon size-dependent predation risk
per se and avoid some of the problems with interpretation of body size effects mentioned in the previous section (i.e. that multiple hypotheses can potentially explain
why migrants and residents may differ in body size).
Further evidence from individual-based studies that supports the role of predation
in shaping the dynamics of partial migration includes a recent study into roach
Rutilus rutilus (L. 1758) partial migration. In this study, Chapman et al. (2011c)
showed that migrants and residents differ behaviourally, with migrants exhibiting
bolder, more risk-prone behaviour than residents. The authors suggest that this may
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0·8
0·6
0·6
0·4
0·4
0·2
0·2
0·0
0·0
0–
5– 5
10 10
–
15 15
–2
20 0
–
25 25
–3
30 0
–3
35 5
–
40 40
–
45 45
–5
50 0
–
55 55
–6
0
0·8
Predation vulnerability
(b)
1·0
0–
5– 5
10 10
–
15 15
–2
20 0
–
25 25
–3
30 0
–3
35 5
–
40 40
–
45 45
–5
50 0
–
55 55
–6
0
Migration proportion
(a)
1·0
LT (cm)
Fig. 1. Individual migration propensity ( ) and size-specific predation vulnerabilities (
) of Abramis brama
in two Danish lakes: (a) Søgård and (b) Loldrup. Both lakes show the same pattern: predation risk and
migratory propensity decrease with increasing total length (LT ) body size. Reproduced with permission
from Skov et al. (2011).
implicate predation risk as an important factor in partial migration in this species,
as bold individuals may migrate overwinter in order to avoid predation when food
resources and hence the benefits of residency are reduced.
In both these examples, essentially what drives the polymorphic element of the
migratory behaviour of the cyprinids is a trade-off between growth potential (g)
and predation risk (p), with resident fishes occupying a relatively high growth,
high predation environment during winter and migrants moving to a relatively low
growth, low risk habitat (Brönmark et al., 2008). During the winter in the shallow
lakes the cyprinids inhabit, food availability is massively decreased compared with
the summer, but still remains higher than the streams the migrants occupy. Hence,
individuals fleeing predation do so at a cost to their food consumption during winter.
This cost is traded off against the benefit of a lower predation risk in the streams
(Brönmark et al., 2008). Thus, partial migration can be considered in the same p:g
framework developed by Werner & Gilliam (1984) to explain ontogenetic habitat
shifts in fishes. In some salmonids, the same p:g trade-off may have explanatory
power in explaining patterns of partial anadromy, although the pattern is reversed,
with migration being the more perilous strategy. In such cases, migrants to marine
environment experience a more profitable food environment, but one which also
incurs a higher predation risk, whilst residents encounter lower predation risk and
also have lower growth potential. A number of studies show that sea migrants have
a higher mortality risk than freshwater residents, although the source of mortality is
of course very difficult to infer (Elliot, 1993).
Skipped-breeding partial migration is usually explained by the energetic costs of
migration. If individuals cannot afford to migrate and spawn they will remain resident
(Rideout et al., 2005). Predation risk, however, may also be important: for example,
Norwegian spring-spawning herring Clupea harengus L. 1758 face high predation
risk at the spawning grounds due to a variety of coastal predators (Fernö et al., 1998).
In addition to partial seasonal migration, a recent longitudinal study over 10 years
in a deep German lake has shown that DVM in fishes can also be partial, and
populations can be composed of both residents and vertical migrants (Mehner &
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B. B. CHAPMAN ET AL.
Kasprzak, 2011). This study documented partial DVM in two species of freshwater
zooplanktivores (Coregonus spp.). Migration to the upper hypolimnetic layers results
in higher feeding rates, and whilst there is no direct data on differences in predation
risk between shallow and deep waters at dusk, the authors showed differences in
body size between migrants and residents. One explanation for these differences is
that larger fish within species were less vulnerable to predation and could thus take
advantage of the more productive feeding habitat, and hence this partial DVM can
potentially be explained using the p:g framework. The body size data, however,
were from a single sample and in addition size differences were not extreme, and so
Mehner & Kasprzak (2011) highlight that this is by no means conclusive evidence
of the role of a predation and growth potential trade-off in driving partial DVM.
Body size differences between migrant and resident coregonids could also reflect
differences in the costs of respiration at different temperature regimes. If smaller
fish within a species pay a greater metabolic cost for feeding in warmer waters this
may reduce the benefit of migration and hence be an important factor in shaping
patterns of partial DVM in these species.
Research into other species also highlights the importance of predation risk in
shaping partial migratory patterns in fishes, e.g. bull trout Salvelinus confluentus
(Suckley 1859) (Monnot et al., 2008); Arctic charr Salvenlinus alpinus (L. 1758)
(Näslund et al., 1993) and also in animals from other taxonomic groups, from water
fleas Daphnia magna (Hansson & Hylander, 2009) to Canadian elk Cervus elaphus
(Hebblewhite & Merrill, 2009). In the future, it is likely that many more studies
will implicate predation as a key ecological factor in the partial migration of fishes.
One notable lacuna from work on predation on fishes is the importance of avian
and mammalian predators in shaping fish behaviour. Most studies focus solely upon
the importance of piscivorous fish predation (Skov et al., 2010). An important next
step will be to factor in the role of endothermic predators to patterns of partial
migration in fishes. These predators may be particularly important during winter,
when piscivorous fish predation is reduced due to lower temperatures reducing the
predator’s metabolic rates and hence feeding requirements, whereas ectotherms such
as birds and mammals sustain a high predation rate all year round.
Competitive release
Intraspecific competition can also play an important role in driving partial migration in fishes. In environments that have a seasonally limited food resource it might
be predicted that competitively inferior individuals would be forced to pay the costs
of migration in order to seek new foraging opportunities (known as the competitive
release hypothesis: Chapman et al., 2011b). There is some evidence for the role of
competition in fish partial migration, but as an individual’s competitive ability is
difficult to measure usually surrogates such as body condition are used (Näslund
et al., 1993). Several studies show a link between body condition and migratory
tendency in fishes; for example, within a population of landlocked S. alpinus, fish
that migrated into streams were found to have a significantly lower body condition
than lake residents (Näslund et al., 1993). Furthermore, in an experimental study, S.
alpinus that were fed reduced rations were more likely to migrate from a northern
Swedish lake (Näslund, 1991). These migrations were carried out during the spring
months and are thus likely to be feeding migrations. Brodersen et al. (2008a) also
reported an effect of body condition upon migratory tendency in the cyprinid R.
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rutilus. By manipulating individual condition via enhanced feeding or starvation,
they showed that fish with higher body condition scores were more likely to make a
winter migration out of shallow lakes into the surrounding streams (Brodersen et al.,
2008a). Here, the fish made a winter migration which is thought to function as a
refuge migration, with migrants escaping from the high predation risk in the lake
over the winter months whilst food availability was low (Brönmark et al., 2008).
Thus, fish with a low body condition are thought to be unable to afford to pay the
energetic costs of surviving overwinter in the streams and must hence remain in the
relatively higher predation lake habitat. In both examples here, fish of low condition
were forced into a potentially suboptimal strategy.
More compelling evidence for the role of competition comes from recent work
where brown trout Salmo trutta L. 1758 were reciprocally transplanted from highdensity river sections with low specific-growth rates to low-density sections with
high specific-growth rates (Olsson et al., 2006). Fish that were transplanted into
high-density conditions behaved similarly to local fish, and exhibited a much higher
rate of migration than fish either transplanted to, or originating from, low-density
river sections. Laboratory trials also showed that fishes reared under low food conditions were more likely to develop the migratory phenotype (Olsson et al., 2006),
a pattern also documented in feeding experiments with S. alpinus (Nordeng, 1983).
Despite elegantly combining field translocations with laboratory work, the authors
could not exclude the influence of predation risk, as migrating fish from the lowdensity section would have to swim through a lake filled with predators whilst fish
from the high-density section did not. It is perfectly plausible that competition and
predation act in synergy to shape patterns of partial migration, and future work could
address the complexities of wild environments by studying multiple ecological factors
simultaneously.
In addition to individual condition, body size has been used as an index of competitive ability. It is important to recognize, however, that within a certain age or
size class individual fish can differ in their competitive ability. Recent studies have
shown that competitive ability can be a component of a fish’s personality (Ward
et al., 2004), or that variation can be due to differences in metabolic rate (McCarthy,
2001). Future work could test the role of individual differences in competitive ability
and migratory tendency to circumvent more indirect measures such as condition or
size. Whilst such studies are undoubtedly logistically demanding, recent work linking animal personality to migratory tendency in fishes suggests that this approach
may be rewarding (Chapman et al., 2011c).
Trophic polymorphism and niche shifts
In fishes, there are many examples of resource polymorphism (also known as
trophic polymorphism), whereby populations are composed of individuals that specialize upon different food items (Smith & Skulason, 1996). This form of life history
polymorphism has been widely described in G. aculeatus, perch Perca fluviatus
L. 1758, bluegill sunfish Lepomis macrochirus Rafinesque 1819, and many other
species, including partial migrants such as R. rutilus (Bolnick et al., 2003). If such
intrapopulation variation in dietary optima exists in partially migratory populations,
and there is also temporal and spatial variation in the abundance or availability
of different food types, trophic polymorphism could play a role in partial migration. In other words, individuals that vary in which food items they prefer may
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adopt different migratory strategies if the abundance of the preferred prey differs
seasonally between two habitats. Trophic niche shifts can also be ontogenetic, and
many species go through ontogenetic niche shifts during development (Werner &
Gilliam, 1984). Therefore age or size-structured partial migration may also be influenced by trophic polymorphism. This class of explanation for partial migration is
known as the trophic polymorphism hypothesis (Chapman et al., 2011b). Whilst this
is an intriguing idea, as yet few studies have addressed this. Stable isotopic analyses comparing the diet of migrants and residents could elucidate the importance
of resource polymorphism in partially migratory fishes. The scant evidence that is
available is suggestive but circumstantial that dietary niche differences may play a
role in partial migration. For example, in the coastal partial migrant Apogon notatus (Houttuyn 1782), migratory fish differed in δ 13 C compared with residents prior
to migration, which suggests dietary differences between individuals with divergent
migratory strategies (Fukumori et al., 2008).
T H E E V O L U T I O N A RY M A I N T E N A N C E O F PA RT I A L
M I G R AT I O N
Partial migration is a life-history polymorphism, and can evolve and be maintained
when different life-history strategies produce the same lifetime fitness values, or as
a result of conditional strategies. In other words, partial migration can be maintained
over evolutionary time as either: (1) a frequency dependent evolutionary stable state
(ESS), where the two strategies have equal fitness at an equilibrium point or (2) a
situation where the best strategy is dependent upon an individual’s phenotype (Chapman et al., 2011b). The second scenario is often called a ‘conditional strategy’ in
the partial migration literature (Lundberg, 1988) and occurs when an individual’s
migratory status is determined by a relatively fixed intrinsic state (e.g. age and sex),
or a flexible extrinsic state (e.g. physical condition and dominance). Conditional
migration may also be frequency dependent (as in the former ESS category), if for
example migratory behaviour is driven by body condition, and food resources are
limited by intraspecific competition. Yet whilst a great deal of the theoretical investigation of partial migration involves ESS models (Lundberg, 1987, Kaitala et al.,
1993), there is little empirical evidence for this mechanism from wild studies. Particularly in fishes, individual fitness data are extremely difficult to collect, and few if
any studies have attempted to quantify the lifetime fitness of migrants compared to
residents. Future studies should attempt to overcome the significant logistical issues
surrounding such data collection and address this gap in present knowledge. Conversely, there are many partial migration studies that support the idea that migratory
tendency is influenced by individual asymmetries such as sex or age. Many of these
studies are on birds, and fewer use fishes as study organisms. For conditional partial migration, migration or residency can evolve as the ‘best of a bad job’ where
fitness balancing between migrants and residents is not required (Lundberg, 1987).
This can occur in systems where there is a significant energetic cost to migration,
and individuals in poor physiological condition with low energy reserves are forced
to remain resident. Some data suggest that this is at least partially the case for R.
rutilus, as analysis showed that individuals with a low body condition score were
less likely to migrate from shallow lakes into the connecting streams for the winter
(Brodersen et al., 2008a). In this species, however, the matter is more complicated,
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as longitudinal analysis has shown that migratory tendency has both a fixed and a
flexible component. It is important to note that in all these cases, fish making the
best of a bad job can still be considered as choosing the best strategy to maximize
their individual fitness.
N AT U R E A N D N U RT U R E : T H E P R O X I M AT E C O N T R O L
M E C H A N I S M S O F F I S H M I G R AT I O N
The factors which control the proximate expression of migratory status are of great
interest in migration biology. Migratory status can be determined by a genetic polymorphism (i.e. a set of migratory alleles code for migration or residency), phenotypic
plasticity (where migratory status is shaped by the environment), or it can be learnt
(Chapman et al., 2011b). Migratory tendency is either obligate, and fixed throughout an individual’s lifetime, or facultative and the product of intrinsic or extrinsic
factors (Terrill & Able, 1988), or in some cases can have both fixed and flexible
components (B. B. Chapman, unpubl. data). If migratory tendency is fixed this is
not necessarily the result of a genetic polymorphism: alternatively, early conditions
could determine whether an individual is a migrant or a resident via the phenotypic
canalization of a developmentally plastic trait. This would mean that all fish within a
species could potentially be migratory or resident, with migratory status being determined by early life conditions; however, once a fish is either a migrant or a resident
the behaviour is relatively fixed. This appears to be the case in white perch Morone
americana (Gmelin 1789), whereby migratory contingent fish usually originate from
early spawned cohorts (Kerr & Secor, 2010). Early spawned fish experience thermal
conditions associated with poor food availability and low growth rates, which lead
them to adopt a migratory strategy.
Similarly, migratory strategy can be highly plastic, with individual fish switching between migrant and resident in different years (e.g. in skipped breeding partial
migration: Shaw & Levin, 2011), or migratory behaviour can be learnt. There is no
strong empirical evidence for strong genetic determinism in migratory dimorphism
in fishes, but rather many recent studies suggest that environmental influences are
important (Olsson et al., 2006; Kerr & Secor, 2010; Skov et al., 2010). Recently,
a model was proposed which integrates environmental and genetic influences to
explain the control mechanisms involved in partial migration (the environmental
threshold model: Pulido, 2011). The model states that there is a trait which underlies
the expression of the migratory dimorphism (the liability), and a threshold which
determines which phenotype is produced. If the liability of an individual is above
the threshold an individual will express migratory behaviour. On the other hand, if
the liability is lower than the threshold the individual will remain resident (Pulido,
2011). Hence, this model suggests that all individuals within partially migratory populations have the innate propensity to migrate, but just that some have such high
threshold values that migratory behaviour is extremely unlikely to be expressed in
that individual. This model can be used to address the developmentally canalized
migratory behaviour that has been documented in partially anadromous fishes such
as Atlantic salmon Salmo salar L. 1758, where individuals undergo a major physiological transition to prepare them for oceanic migration. Here, the threshold is
essentially a developmental switch-point, following which an individual adopts a
migratory or resident phenotype. This model may also have high explanatory power
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for the M. americana system described above, where early environmental conditions
shape an individual’s migratory status (Kerr & Secor, 2010), which remains consistent over the fish’s entire lifetime (Kerr et al., 2009). The model can also be applied
to highly plastic migratory behaviour determined by (for example) current energetic
state (Brodersen et al., 2008a). Whilst most evidence to support this model is from
laboratory experiments with passerine birds (Pulido et al., 1996), genetic variation
in threshold reaction norms for different migratory phenotypes has been reported
in S. salar (Piche et al., 2008). Less evidence exists for learning as a proximate
mechanism for migration in fishes, perhaps at least partly as most research effort is
focused upon species with no parental care and demonstrating patterns of learning
in the wild is not a straightforward task. Some data, however, hints that learning
(also known as entrainment in a migratory context) could play a role in differential
migratory behaviour in oceanodromous fishes (Petitgas et al., 2010).
CONSEQUENCES OF PARTIAL MIGRATION IN FISHES
The majority of the analytical work into partial migration in fishes focuses upon
the proximate or ultimate causes of variation in migratory tendency. Research into
the consequences of partial migration is far rarer, although these are often speculated
upon and discussed in the literature. In this section, the evidence for the ecological
and evolutionary consequences of migratory dimorphism is reviewed and also potential avenues for future research discussed. Finally, the applied implications of partial
migration are addressed, and the argument made that understanding partial migration
is critical for the conservation and management of many species, ecosystems and
fish stocks.
E C O L O G I C A L E F F E C T S O F PA RT I A L M I G R AT I O N
Partial migration drives spatial and temporal variation in the abundance of organisms and hence may have important ecological consequences, although empirical
studies are uncommon. Despite this, theoretical models as well as some empirical
work have shown that partial migration can be a powerful force shaping ecosystem
dynamics (Hansson et al., 2007; Brodersen et al., 2008b; 2011). These ecological
effects can roughly be divided into two categories: nutrient transport and trophic
effects. For both, the effect size can be predicted to increase with the proportion of
the population that is migratory and the time that the migratory individuals spend
away from an ecosystem.
The importance of nutrient transport is well known in anadromous salmonids that
transport marine-derived nutrients to freshwater ecosystems (Naiman et al., 2002).
This input is mediated through either the death of adult fishes or through egg deposition. Out-migrating fishes, however, also transport freshwater-derived nutrients in
the opposite direction. Hence, the net-directional transport cannot necessarily be
easily determined based on the type of migration. Whereas nutrient transport has
been considered for a number of full migration systems, it has only recently been
addressed for partial migration (Swanson et al., 2010). Partial migration leads to a
significant (and potentially temporally fluctuating) seasonal flow of nutrients in and
out of ecosystems, which may influence ecosystem stability and dynamics. Parallel to
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nutrient transport, anadromous fishes can also transport contaminants from marineto freshwater ecosystems (Swanson & Kidd, 2010); a flux that will increase with the
proportion of migratory individuals in the population.
From a trophic ecological point of view, partial migration means that a part of
a population within that ecosystem is missing for part of the year (Brodersen et al.
2008a). Since many partially migratory fishes can be considered to be either keystone
or dominant species, and thereby under normal circumstances have an ecological
effect on other species in the ecosystem, it is very likely that the temporal absence
of a part of such a population may also affect other species in the ecosystem. The
most obvious effects are probably those that act upon the prey of the migratory
species (i.e. top-down effects), which will experience a decrease in predation risk
over the migratory period. For example, the migration of cyprinids from lakes to
streams during winter can affect lacustrine plankton dynamics. In a recent study, the
proportion of R. rutilus migrating overwinter and the timing of migration explained
both the size-structure of zooplankton, and the phenology of spring zooplankton and
potentially also phytoplankton (Brodersen et al., 2011). This suggests that partial
migration in cyprinids may not only have a direct effect upon the prey (zooplankton),
but also have cascading effects down the food chain (Brodersen et al., 2008b). In this
example, the cascading effects of cyprinid partial migration have been speculated to
play a critical role in regulating regime shifts for the entire lake ecosystem between
a clear-water and turbid state (Hansson et al., 2007; Brönmark et al., 2010).
In addition to top-down effects and trophic cascades, the consequences of partial
migration may transmit up the food chain. For example, the predators of partial
migrants are likely to be affected by the seasonal loss of high numbers of prey.
This effect, however, may be remediated or even made positive if partially migratory populations can achieve higher population sizes and further, if they migrate
during the winter, when the food requirements of poikilothermic piscivorous predators are reduced, as is the case with many cyprinids (Skov et al., 2011). Additional
effects may be evident amongst the competitors of partial migrants, as the seasonal
absence of a migratory species may lead to a temporary reduction in competition
with non-migratory species. Another way in which partial migration can affect community structure is by reducing competition and hence allowing for the coexistence
of a competitor. For example, relatively unproductive Arctic lakes can usually only
support one large-bodied fish predator (Johnson, 1980). Hence S. alpinus only cooccur with lake trout Salvelinus namaycush (Walbaum 1792) if their populations are
partially migratory, and are hence partially supported by the marine environment.
Predation from shared predators may also increase seasonally on non-migratory
species during the absence of migratory species. Predation pressure for competitors
may be strongly predicted to increase when predators display a type III functional
response and switch diet dependent on relative abundance. Hence for competitors
of partially migratory species, a high proportion of migrants can be predicted to
lead to a seasonal decrease in competition for food, but to an increased predation
pressure. Since the consequences of migration for competitors can be both positive
and negative, the net effect cannot be easily predicted.
To summarize, partial migration in fishes may have significant ecological consequences on a number of levels, and it is hopeful that future work, both theoretical
and empirical, will address the current lack of information in this area.
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E V O L U T I O N A RY C O N S E Q U E N C E S O F PA RT I A L M I G R AT I O N
In addition to ecological effects, partial migration also has the potential to have
evolutionary consequences, and these are dependent on the type of partial migration that occurs. Breeding partial migration, where migrants breed allopatrically to
residents, migrants and residents spawn in geographically distinct areas, and so for
this form of partial migration gene flow between migrants and residents has already
been reduced, with allopatric spawning acting as a reproductive barrier. As fish of
the same species share habitat for a major part of the year, however, this decreases
the opportunity for local adaptation and hence reduces the potential for evolutionary
divergence compared to allopatric spawning in non-partial migrants. In non-breeding
partial migration the opposite may be true. In this form of partial migration, different
migratory contingents may experience a differentiated adaptive landscape, leading to
different selection pressures for residents and migrants. Such a differentiated adaptive landscape during the migratory period may lead to disruptive selection, where
migrants are selected for traits related to migratory travel as well as for traits related
to the environmental conditions in the habitat to which the fishes migrate. Whether
this leads to assortative mating and population divergence is dependent upon a number of factors. For example, the proximate mechanism underlying migratory tendency
plays an important role here. If migratory behaviour is genetically fixed in individuals there would probably be strong disruptive selection to occur in situations where
migratory fish within a species experience different environmental conditions during
the migratory period compared with residents. If migratory tendency is a phenotypically flexible trait and responsive to environmental conditions [such as is the case
for S. trutta (Olsson et al., 2006) and M. americana (Kerr & Secor, 2011)], this
plasticity may decrease the power of disruptive selection.
If disruptive selection does occur, whether this leads to a diversification or in an
extreme case an adaptive radiation is dependent upon the degree of assortative mating
between migratory and resident fishes, i.e. the degree to which migrants are more
likely to mate with other migrants as compared with residents. Such assortative
mating can be the result of a number of mechanisms. Whilst with this form of
partial migration migrants and residents are thought to breed in sympatry, cryptic
barriers may still exist within the shared habitat. For example, in lake dwelling
Coregonus spp., depth gradients in spawning sites are known to facilitate adaptive
radiation (Vonlanthen et al., 2008). Also the timing of spawning is likely to influence
the degree of assortative mating between residents and migrants. Differences in
spawning time between residents and migrants can be the result of a differentiated
adaptive landscape for residents and migrants, where migrants are selected for either
earlier or later spawning than residents. Alternatively, temporal spawning segregation
could occur as a direct eco-physiological result of partial migration, where gonad
maturation in one habitat proceeds faster than in the alternative habitat, for example
due to differences in temperature or food availability. Lastly, assortative mating
between migrants and residents can also be a result of direct mate choice, when
residents are more likely to choose to mate with other resident fishes over migrants.
In order for behavioural assortative mating to exist, there has to be phenotypic
differences between migrants and residents at the time of spawning, which can be
either behavioural or morphological.
The evolutionary consequences are thus mainly concerned with spawning segregation and disruptive selection between migrants and residents. For fishes, this
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is exemplified in some Alaskan rivers, where anadromous sockeye salmon Oncorynchus nerka (Walbaum 1792) and the resident form (called the kokanee) compose
a partially migratory population. Especially in males reproductive success is related
to the degree of red skin colouration, where the pigment responsible for the colouration is attained mainly through crustaceans in the diet. Since the diet of the fish in the
ocean contains more of the pigment, the resident form has evolved a more efficient
use of the pigment. Although the two forms display mating preference for their own
form, hybrids exist, but these perform less well and thus there is disruptive selection
in the population.
A P P L I E D I M P L I C AT I O N S O F PA RT I A L M I G R AT I O N
IN FISHES
Understanding partial migration in fishes is not simply an academic exercise. It
also has far-reaching and important applied implications. It is essential to know about
a species’ movement patterns through space and time to conserve populations, and
also diversity within populations. In contrast to the conservationists’ desire to keep
some fishes in the water, the same species are removed in vast numbers by the fishing
industry and also to biomanipulate lakes. Hence understanding partial migration can
give clues on when and where to fish, and also what the consequences can be, which
should be an important consideration for management decisions.
Species and phenotypic conservation
Maintaining biodiversity is recognized as a major goal globally, as anthropogenic
activities have led to a wave of extinctions over recent centuries and at an increasing rate in past decades. Migratory species are especially in danger of population
declines, as they rely on multiple habitats to complete their life cycle (Wilcove, 2008).
Partial migrants may be buffered against extinction to some degree by the fact that
they have multiple contingents of fishes that use different habitats within the same
population. Migratory contingents have declined in some species (e.g. S. confluentus:
Nelson et al., 2002), which can have negative consequences for resident fish of the
same species. For example, in years of high water flow the resident contingent of M.
americana, whilst less productive than the migratory contingent, is thought to play
an important role in stabilizing population dynamics in years of poor flow (Kraus &
Secor, 2004). In addition, the loss of genetic diversity that would probably follow
the loss of a migratory or resident contingent is thought to have adverse effects upon
recruitment potential and population recovery (Ryman et al., 1995).
The intraspecific diversity of partial migration can be at threat of being lost if the
migratory habitat is degraded, or there are barriers to migration. The maintenance
of intraspecific diversity forms part of the 1992 Rio Convention on Biodiversity
(Ryman et al., 1995), and so conserving all contingents of partially migratory populations is an important conservation goal. Hence, for situations where different
migratory forms derive from the same gene pool, as with Oncorynchus mykiss (Walbaum 1792), management actions should be focused upon the conservation of both
forms (in this case both steelhead and rainbow trout). This reasoning is currently not
accepted in all fisheries management circles. For example, in 2005 the U.S. National
Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) ruled that steelhead, but not rainbow trout, would
be protected under the U.S. Endangered Species Act (NMFS, 2005). It is likely
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that a deeper understanding of partial migration in fishes by managers and policy
makers will help to avoid such biologically unsound management decisions in the
future. Also practical considerations such as constructing effective fish passages to
assist migratory fishes to pass man-made barriers such as dams can help preserve
intraspecific diversity. It is likely that many partially anadromous and catadromous
populations have suffered heavy losses of migratory contingents due to factors such
as these, as in the case of white-spotted charr Salvelinus leucomaenis (Pallas 1814)
(Morita et al., 2000).
Biomanipulation and lake ecosystem management
Fish migration provides an excellent opportunity for biomanipulation fishing, i.e.
where fish of a particular species are removed with the goal of maintaining a clearwater state for freshwater lakes (Hansson et al., 2007). Eutrophic lakes are commonly
dominated by zooplanktivorous fishes that reinforce a turbid state by the trophic
consequences of zooplanktivory. The removal of zooplanktivores has proven a successful means in attempts to manipulate lakes from a turbid to a clear-water state,
where the resulting clear water is upheld by a high piscivore to zooplanktivore ratio
and top-down trophic cascades (Carpenter & Kitchell, 1993; Hansson et al., 1998).
The removal of unwanted fish types from lakes is, however, often labour intensive and financially costly. Moreover, in shallow European lakes, fish removal often
needs to be repeated on a regular basis in order to maintain a permanent clear-water
state (Søndergaard et al., 2007). The spatio-temporal nature of fish migrations, where
fishes aggregate on migration routes or at destinations, facilitates the efficient capture
of focal fishes as they are more easily located and occur in high local densities. For
instance, partially migrating R. rutilus, small A. brama and other zooplanktivorous
cyprinids that leave lakes for connected streams over winter could easily be denied
return to their lakes in spring, and removed from the system, by simply closing the
streams with seines during the return migration period. The efficiency of this procedure assumes a reliable prediction of timing of return migration, which is largely
governed by seasonal temperature progression and food availability during spring
developments in lakes. This highlights why extensive knowledge of local migratory
behaviours is necessary for effective biomanipulation strategies.
Commercial and recreational fisheries management
The fisheries literature on migratory dimorphism is mostly bereft of the term partial
migration, even though many important commercial species have partially migratory
populations [e.g. C. haringus (Ruzzante et al., 2006); cod Gadus morhua L. 1758
(Cote et al., 2004); plaice Pleuronectes platessa L. 1758 Dunn & Pawson, 2002);
shiraou Salangichthys microdon (Bleeker 1860) (Arai et al., 2003)]. It is a concept,
however, of critical importance in making decisions related to stock management.
For example, residents and migrants can have significantly different growth rates and
hence, achieve very different body sizes. If large-bodied migrants are overfished and
not managed as a separate stock then a high population of unproductive residents may
remain, as is the case for migratory brook trout Salvelinus fontinalis (Mitchill 1814)
in Lake Superior (Schreiner et al., 2004; Sherwood & Grabowski, 2010). Of course
this is also dependent upon the proximate mechanisms that drive partial migration.
In an interesting discussion of C. harengus stock management issues, Ruzzante et al.
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(2006) argue that population sustainability, resistance to disturbance and potentially
even the capacity to recover from low abundances following environmental change
or climatic extremes can be negatively affected by the generalized management
of diverse stocks. As many partial migrants are exploited, it is clearly of major
importance to properly assess biological management units that take into account
within-population migratory polymorphism. More research into the importance of
population structure and life-history diversity in population persistence and rebuilding
would be valuable, not least as this may explain why the recovery of collapsed stocks
takes longer than many theoretical models predict.
Finally, any process which involves removing parts of populations (as in the
harvesting of natural resources such as commercial or recreational fisheries and also
biomanipulation) can be selective with consequences for community or population
composition (Darimont et al., 2009; Jorgensen et al., 2009; Matsumura et al., 2011).
Hence, if migrants are more likely to be removed than residents, this can, for example,
influence sex ratios if one sex dominates the migratory contingent, or age structure
if migrants are from a certain age class. In other words, fishing out only migrating
individuals could extensively reduce both phenotypic and genotypic diversity in
partially migratory fish populations, with conservation and diversity issues at stake.
FUTURE DIRECTIONS, CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES
Partial migration is widespread amongst fishes (Table I; Chapman et al., 2012). It
is a fascinating field of enquiry on many levels, and has thrived as a research area in
recent years. Many interesting, exciting and relevant research questions require more
attention in the future. For example, techniques have advanced such that questions
can be asked about migratory behaviour on a new frontier, and the ecology of individuals addressed. A growing interest in individual variation is not limited to migration
biology, but has also received a great deal of recent attention in other fields such
as behavioural and foraging ecology (Bolnick et al., 2003; Sih et al., 2004). Studies
analysing individual patterns of migration or residency will probably shed light on
the ultimate ecological factors involved in the evolution of partial migration in fishes.
Additionally, few studies have sought to understand the synergies between different
forms of alternative life-history strategies (e.g. trophic polymorphism and alternative
reproductive tactics) and partial migration (with the exception of salmonids).
A focus upon certain taxonomic groups has given many insights into partial migration in fishes, however, many groups are poorly studied, and future work should
address this to give a more complete taxonomic picture of the distribution of partial
migration across genera and families (Chapman et al., 2012). This will allow for phylogenetic analyses to assess the evolutionary origins of this phenomenon. A critical
and contemporary question is how human activities have affected the dynamics of
partial migration; for example, in the exploitation of fish stocks and climate change.
Some work has begun in this area: Theriault et al. (2008) present a theoretical model
of how human harvesting of partially anadromous S. fontinalis can have evolutionary effects on the migration reaction norm, with increasing harvesting rate reducing
the probability of migration (with obvious consequences for fisheries and population productivity). Processes such as eutrophication within freshwater systems may
result in increases in residency for partially anadromous species (Gross, 1987), just
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as eutrophication in saline habitats such as the Baltic Sea may lead to increases in
migratory contingents. Future changes in temperature via global warming may lead
to changes in individual growth rate, which may be important in shaping individual
decisions to migrate.
To assist researchers in the quest to understand the puzzle of partial migration,
there are many opportunities. Technologies to track fishes are cheaper and smaller
and more effective each year. In the future scientists can look forward to datasets
potentially at the scale of entire populations. New molecular techniques are developed
that allow finer and finer detail in the genetic mechanisms of many phenotypic traits
to be understood. Finally, in potamodromous migrations, there is the possibility to
manipulate whole ecosystems, and replicate at the lake and stream level. Whilst
logistically challenging, these kinds of studies can offer unique insights into natural
processes (Carpenter et al., 2011).
B.B.C. received support from a European Commission (FP7) Marie Curie Intra-European
Fellowship grant and the Centre for Animal Movement Research (CAnMove, which is
financed by a Linnaeus grant (349-2007-8690) from the Swedish Research Council and Lund
University). C.S. is funded by the Danish Angling Licence funds. Finally, many thanks to J.
Metcalfe for editing this very interesting thematic and for the invitation to submit, and to two
anonymous referees for their fine editorial advice.
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