Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-gq7q9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-16T12:00:23.331Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

XII.—The Reproduction and Fecundity of the Powan, Coregonus clupeoides Lacépède, in Loch Lomond, Scotland*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 June 2012

Peter S. Maitland
Affiliation:
The Nature Conservancy, Edinburgh.
Get access

Synopsis

Adult powan, Coregonus clupeoides Lacépède, in Loch Lomond show regular diurnal and seasonal migrations, connected normally with either feeding or reproduction. As the breeding season approaches, most of the adult population gather in deep water (usually in the vicinity of the areas of wave-washed gravel and small stones in shallow water, which form the main spawning grounds). The male fish start to move on to these grounds nightly towards the end of December each year; at the end of this month, but mainly during January, the females ripen and join them for spawning. This is completed by the beginning of February and the population then gradually disperses over the rest of the loch. The present fecundity estimates, carried out for female powan during two seasons, are in general agreement with those found for Coregonus elsewhere in the Palearctic region. They give an average of 5750 eggs per adult fish, the mean fork length of which was just over 27 cm. Though there is a positive correlation between the numbers of eggs produced and the size of the females, it is not a strong one. After being laid, the eggs immediately undergo a heavy mortality and are eaten in considerable numbers by trout, Salmo trutta L., powan, roach, Rutilus rutilus (L.) Phryganea larvae, and various other animals. The adult powan too are preyed upon extensively at this time in certain parts of Loch Lomond by pike, Esox luciusL. The reproductive ecology of the powan shows several basic similarities to that of other Salmonidae in the British Isles, the main features fitting well with what has been postulated about the origin and distribution of the family in this country.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1969

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

This paper was assisted in publication by a grant from the Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland.

References

References To Literature

Ammann, E., 1959. “Zusammenhänge zwischen Brutwassertemperatur und Brutdauer, untersucht an Sandfelcheneiren aus dem Zurichee”, Schweiz Z. Hydrol., 11, 263276.Google Scholar
Bagenal, T. B., 1966. “The Ullswater Schelly”, Fid Nat., 11, 12.Google Scholar
Bailey, M. M., 1962. “Age, growth and maturity of round whitefish of the Apostle Islands and Isle Royale regions, Lake Superior”, Fishery Bull., Fish Wildl. Serv. U.S., 63, 6375.Google Scholar
Copland, W. G., 1956. “Notes on the food and parasites of pike (Esox lucius) in Loch Lomond”, Glasg. Nat., 17, 230235.Google Scholar
Deason, H. J. and Hile, R., 1944. “Age and growth of the kiyi, Leucicthys kiyi Koelz in Lake Michigan”, Trans. Am. Fish Soc, 74, 88142.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dryer, W. R. and Beil, J., 1964. “Life history of lake herring in Lake Superior”, Fish Bull., 63, 493530.Google Scholar
Dunn, D. R., 1954. “The feeding of some of the fishes and some members of the bottom fauna of Llyn Tegid (Bala Lake), Merionethshire”, J. Anim. Ecol. 23, 224233.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edsall, T. A., 1960. “Age and growth of whitefish Coregonus clupeaformis of Munising Bay, Lake Superior”, Trans. Am. Fish Soc, 89, 323332.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eschneyer, P. M. and Bailey, R. M., 1954. “The pygmy whitefish, Coregonus coulteri in Lake Superior”, Trans. Am. Fish Soc., 84, 161199.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fry, F. E. J., 1937. “The summer migration of the cisco, Leucicthys artedi (Le Sueur), in Lake Nipissing, Ontario”, Publs Ont. Fish. Res. Lab., 55, 191.Google Scholar
Kennedy, W. A., 1943. “The whitefish, Coregonus clupeaformis (Mitchill) of lake Opeongo, Algonquin Park, Ontario”, Publs Ont. Fish. Res. Lab., 62, 2366.Google Scholar
Lamond, H., 1931. Loch Lomond. Glasgow: Jackson, Wylie & Co.Google Scholar
Maitland, P. S., 1966. “The present status of known populations of the vendace, Coregonus vandesius Richardson in Great Britain”, Nature, Lond., 210, 216–117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maitland, P. S., 1966. “The fauna of the River Endrick”, Glasg. Univ. Publs, Stud. Loch Lomond, 2, 1194.Google Scholar
Maitland, P. S., 1967. “The artificial fertilization and rearing of the eggs of Coregonus clupeoides Lacépède”, Proc. Roy. Soc. Edinb. B, 70, 82106.Google Scholar
Maitland, P. S., 1968. “Echo sounding observations on the Lochmaben vendace, Coregonus vandesius Richardson”, Trans. J. Proc. Dumfries. Galloway Nat. Hist. Antiq. Soc, 44, 2946.Google Scholar
Mraz, D., 1962. “Age, growth, sex ratio and maturity of whitefish in central Green Bay and adacent waters of Lake Michigan”, Fishery Bull., Fish Wildl. Serv. U.S., 63, 619634.Google Scholar
Oosten, J. V. and Hile, R., 1949. “Age and growth of the lake whitefish Coregonus clupeaformis (Mitchill) in Lake Erie”, Trans. Am. Fish Soc, 49, 178249.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parnell, R., 1838. “Observations on the Coregoni of Loch Lomond”, Ann. Nat. Hist., 1, 161.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pope, J. A., Mills, D. M. and Shearer, W. M., 1961. “The fecundity of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar Linn)”, Set. Lnvest. Freshwat. Fish Soc, 26, 112.Google Scholar
Price, C. E. and Maitland, P. S., 1967. “The proposed role of parasites as indicators of host ancestry”, Ass. Sth. Biol. Bull., 14, 38.Google Scholar
Regan, C. T., 1908. “A revision of the British and Irish fishes of the genus Coregonus”, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., 2, 482490.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schaperclaus, W., 1940. “Untersuchungen an Eiern und Brut von Maranen, Hechten und Forellen”, Verh. Int. Verein. Theor. Angew. Limmol., 9, 215216.Google Scholar
Schindler, O., 1957. Freshwater Fishes, London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Slack, H. D., 1954. “The bottom deposits of Loch Lomond”, Proc. Roy. Soc Edinb., B, 65, 213238.Google Scholar
Slack, H. D., 1955. “Factors affecting the productivity of Coregonus clupeoides Lacépède in Loch Lomond”, Verh. Int. Verein Theor. Angew. Limnol., 12, 183186.Google Scholar
Slack, H. D., 1957. “The topography of the lake”, Glasg. Univ. Pubh, Stud. Loch Lomond, 1, 413.Google Scholar
Slack, H. D., Gervers, F. W. K. and Hamilton, J. D., 1957. “The biology of the powan”, Glasg. Univ. Pubh, Stud. Loch Lomond, 1, 113127.Google Scholar
Smith, S. H., 1956. “Life history of lake herring of Green Bay, Lake Michigan”, Fish. Bull., 57, 87138.Google Scholar
Swynnerton, G. H. and Worthington, E. B., 1940. “Note on the food of fish in Haweswater (Westmorland)”,.J. Anim. Ecol., 9, 183187.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, W., 1856. A natural history of Ireland. London.Google Scholar
Twomey, E., 1956. “Pollan of Lough Erne”, Ir. Nat.J., 12, 1417.Google Scholar
Weerekoon, A. C. J., 1957. “The maintenance of isolated faunas”, Glasg. Univ. Publs, Stud. Loch Lomond, 1, 4955.Google Scholar