Abstract
Anadromous salmonids, including sea-run brown trout, are exposed to
ectoparasitic salmon lice during their sea migrations. The modern
industrialization of coastal areas has promoted louse epidemics by
substantially increasing the number of hosts available to the parasite.
We employed a mark-recapture study involving large-scale traps to
capture and PIT-tag 676 wild sea-trout during their early marine
migration in spring 2020 and 2021. Each trout was examined for lice,
tagged with passive integrated transponders, and monitored for
subsequent survival using a PIT antenna system installed at the river
Yndesdalsvassdraget. Using a Cormack-Jolly-Seber capture recapture model
of individual re-detections the subsequent years, we found a significant
negative correlation between lice per gram of fish weight and the
survival probability. Increasing lice load from 0 to 1 louse per gram
fish reduced the survival probability by approximately 73% in 2020 and
58% in 2021. This is among the first field studies to demonstrate a
statistically significant association between individual survival of
brown trout and their parasite loads in the wild. Our findings
demonstrate the critical need for robust marine spatial planning and
lice management in coastal fisheries. Effective control of lice loads is
essential to mitigate their deleterious effects on brown trout, ensuring
sustainable fish populations and maintaining ecological balance in
regions affected by aquaculture.