Data from: The feeding ecology of invasive pink salmon Juveniles in northern Norwegian rivers and their role as prey to native Salmonids
Data files
Apr 21, 2026 version files 85.81 KB
-
Pink-salmon-master-file.csv
82.05 KB
-
README.md
3.76 KB
Abstract
Increasing numbers of invasive Pacific pink salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha) are spawning in northern Norwegian rivers, leading to large numbers of juveniles migrating to coastal waters. This raises concerns about food competition in rivers with native salmonids, although details about the timing and intensity of pink salmon feeding and the characteristics of their freshwater diet remain unclear. Some evidence indicates that pink salmon can also serve as a food source for native salmonids, as do the carcasses of spawned adults, eggs and juveniles. This study investigated largely unexplored aspects of the emergence timing and feeding behaviour of juvenile pink salmon. The prevalence, timing and impact of fish size on freshwater feeding was examined across 10 rivers in northern Norway, using stomach content and stable isotope (δ13C and δ15N) analyses to assess diet composition. Similar methods were applied to assess whether native juvenile salmonids feed on pink salmon tissue, such as juveniles, during their migration. Predictions of the emergence times of alevins show that later spawning, thought to cause increased potential negative interactions with native fish, is an unlikely strategy for pink salmon in northern Norway. In three of the rivers, some of the largest free‐swimming pink salmon juveniles sampled in this study (30–35 mm) began external feeding on freshwater invertebrates later in the season (June and July), with larval and pupae chironomids as well as blackfly and mayfly nymphs dominating their diets. Feeding was not observed in all rivers, highlighting the need for further study on the prevalence and intensity of freshwater feeding. Stomach content and stable isotope analyses revealed that some larger native Atlantic salmon and brown trout juveniles consumed pink salmon juveniles, complicating assessments of their overall impact on native salmonids.
Dataset DOI: 10.5061/dryad.n02v6wxch
Description of the data and file structure
Pink salmon, Atlantic salmon and brown trout juveniles were sampled from 10 northern Norwegian rivers. Fish were weighed, measured for total length and stomach contents were examined. Stable isotope analysis was run on some individuals to examine changes in reliance on marine derived nutrients and energy from pink salmon eggs or carcasses vs freshwater invertebrates.
Files and variables
File: Pink-salmon-master-file.csv
Description:
Variables
- Label_ID: Unique identification code for each individual
- Day:
- Month:
- Year:
- Date: dd.mm.yyyy
- River: Sample origin river
- River_Section: Sample river section origin (Lower or Middle)
- Species: Pink salmon, atlantic salmon or brown trout
- Sampling_Method-: Method used to collect sample
- Conservation: Method used to conserve the sample (ethanol or freezing)
- Weight_g: Weight in grams
- TL_mm: Total length in mm
- FL_mm: Fork length in mm
- Stomach_Content-: Binary with 0 meaning no stomach contents and 1 meaning stomach contents
- Stomach_Percent. : Relative estimate of stomach fullness (0 - 1)
- Percent: Percentage estimate of stomach fullness (0 - 100)
- Otolith: Binary with 0 meaning no otolith sampled and 1 meaning otolith sampled
- Genetic: Binary with 0 meaning no genetic sample and 1 meaning genetic sample taken
- SIA_Muscle: Binary with 0 meaning no muscle sample and 1 meaning muscle sample taken
- SIA_Liver: Binary with 0 meaning no liver sample and 1 meaning liver sample taken
- Yolk_sac: Binary with 0 meaning no yolk sac and 1 meaning yolk sac present
- Chironomidae larvae: Relative estimate of stomach fullness from Chironomidae larvae (0 - 1)
- Chironomidae pupae: Relative estimate of stomach fullness from Chironomidae pupae (0 - 1)
- Blackfly larvae: Relative estimate of stomach fullness from blackfly larvae (0 - 1)
- Surface insects: Relative estimate of stomach fullness from surface insects (0 - 1)
- Stonefly nymph: Relative estimate of stomach fullness from stonefly nymph (0 - 1)
- Water mites: Relative estimate of stomach fullness from water mites (0 - 1)
- Mayfly nymph: Relative estimate of stomach fullness from mayfly nymph (0 - 1)
- Biting midge : Relative estimate of stomach fullness from biting midge (0 - 1)
- Copepod: Relative estimate of stomach fullness from copepod (0 - 1)
- Unidentified: Relative estimate of stomach fullness from unidentified content (0 - 1)
- Caddisfly case : Relative estimate of stomach fullness from caddisfly larvae (0 - 1)
- Identifier: Unique number for Stable Isotope Analysis
- RUN_: Unique number for Stable Isotope Analysis run
- Sample_amount: Weight of sample amount in grams
- d13C: δ¹³C (‰). Stable carbon isotope composition relative to the VPDB standard
- d15N: δ¹⁵N (‰). Stable nitrogen isotope composition relative to the AIR standard
- C_percent: Carbon content of the sample, expressed as percentage of dry mass
- N_percent: Nitrogen content of the sample, expressed as percentage of dry mass
- C_N_ratio: Molar ratio of carbon to nitrogen in the sample
- d34S: δ³⁴S (‰). Stable sulfur isotope composition relative to the VCDT standard
- percentS: Sulphur content of the sample, expressed as percentage of dry mass
- Comment: Additional comments
Code/software
All data was analysed in R using the following packages: lme4, Matrix, lmerTest, sjPlot, dplyr, ggplot2 and stats.
