Skip to main content
info@mjbayly.com

Mean Annual Discharge and Atlantic Salmon

View all records in the stressor response library
Species Common Name
Atlantic Salmon
Latin Name (Genus species)
Salmo salar
Stressor Name
Flow
Specific Stressor Metric
Mean Annual Discharge (MAD)
Stressor Units
%
Vital Rate (Process)
Density change (%)

Life Stage

Season
Winter
Geography
Catamaran Brook, NB, Canada
Detailed SR Function Description
Final curve was derived from a linear regression.

System capacity was derived from seasonal electrofishing data which was available for 13 years (1990-2002) from 8 to 10 sites in the Lower Reach of Catamaran Brook. Fish abundance was then estimated using a multiple-sweep depletion method (Zippin, 1958) during annual electrofishing surveys in the summer and autumn.
To normalize and rescale each ecological response, each value was scaled by the maximum ecological response observed in the study such that mean habitat capacity percentage (normalized response) = response / maximum ecological response observed.
Implicit pathway of effect: Over-winter density decline of juvenile Atlantic salmon is reduced at higher average winter flows.
Function Derivation
Observational data. Final curve was derived from linear regression.
Transferability of Function
Appropriate for winter stream flow impacts on Atlantic Salmon juveniles. General transferability to other salmon stocks in unclear, but likely appropriate for other autumn-spawning salmonids (i.e., regions with similar hydrology to the Catamaran Brook).
The relationship may be unreliable if extrapolated to a flow range outside the original data (see the Average Salmonid flow-ecology SR function entry based on Rosenfeld and Enright (2025) for a more generalizable function across a wider range of flows).
Source of stressor Data
The winter streamflow data (discharge) for Catamaran Brook was collected using a streamflow gauging station located in the mid-basin. See methods of Cunjack et al. 2013 for details.
Data was then standardized by dividing absolute flow by MAD to achieve %MAD values (see Rosenfeld & Enright 2024). Such standardization allows for comparison of flow metrics across a wide range of stream sizes (see Rosenfeld et al. 2017).
Function Type
continuous
Stressor Scale
linear
References Cited
Cunjak, R.A., Linnansaari, T., and Caissie, D. 2013. The complex interaction of ecology and
hydrology in a small catchment: a salmon's perspective. Hydrol. Process. 27: 741-749.
Images
Stressor Response csv data
Data_Atlantic_Flow_Catamaran_Juv_0.csv (413 bytes)
PERCENT_MAD Mean System Capacity (%) SD low.limit up.limit
24.67369231 34.6152692 0 0 100
24.86276923 34.7570769 0 0 100
31.22107692 39.5258077 0 0 100
33.62246154 41.3268462 0 0 100
36.42353846 43.4276538 0 0 100
58.38076923 59.8955769 0 0 100
60.97584615 61.8418846 0 0 100
72.04476923 70.1435769 0 0 100
73.09984615 70.9348846 0 0 100
75.02830769 72.3812308 0 0 100
85.82707692 80.4803077 0 0 100

Stressor Response Chart

Mean Response
±1 Standard Deviation
Upper/Lower Limits
Download PDF Export this profile