Six decades of ecohydrological research connecting landscapes and
riverscapes in the Girnock Burn, Scotland: Atlantic salmon population
and habitat dynamics in a changing world.
Abstract
Long-term data are crucial for understanding ecological responses to
climate and land use change; they are also vital evidence for informing
management. As a migratory fish, Atlantic salmon are sentinels of both
global and local environmental change. This paper reviews the main
insights from six decades of research in an upland Scottish stream
(Girnock Burn) inhabited by a spring Atlantic salmon population
dominated by multi-sea-winter fish. Research began in the 1960s
providing a census of returning adults, juvenile emigrants and in-stream
production of Atlantic salmon. Early research pioneered new monitoring
techniques providing new insights into salmon ecology and population
dynamics. These studies underlined the need for interdisciplinary
approaches for understanding salmon interactions with physical, chemical
and biological components of in-stream habitats at different
life-stages. This highlighted variations in catchment-scale
hydroclimate, hydrology, geomorphology and hydrochemistry as essential
to understanding freshwater habitats in the wider landscape context.
Evolution of research has resulted in a remarkable catalogue of novel
findings underlining the value of long-term data that increases with
time as modelling tools advance to leverage more insights from “big
data”. Data are available on fish numbers, sizes and ages across
multiple life stages, extending over many decades and covering a wide
range of stock levels. Combined with an unusually detailed
characterisation of the environment, these data have enabled a unique
process-based understanding of the controls and bottlenecks on salmon
population dynamics across the entire lifecycle and the consequences of
declining marine survival and ova deposition. Such powerful datasets,
methodological enhancements and the resulting process understanding have
informed and supported the development of fish population assessment
tools which have been applied to aid management of threatened salmon
stocks at large-catchment, regional and national scales. Many pioneering
monitoring and modelling approaches developed have been applied
internationally. This history shows the importance of integrating
curiosity-driven science with monitoring for informing policy
development and assessing efficacy of management options. It also
demonstrates the need of continue to resource long-term sites which act
as a focus for inter-disciplinary research and innovation, and where the
overall value of the research greatly exceeds the costs of individual
component parts.