Challenges in the conservation, rehabilitation and recovery of native stream salmonid populations: Beyond the 2010 Luarca symposium

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Abstract

In May 2010, I chaired a session on challenges to salmonid conservation at the international symposium 'Advances in the population ecology of stream salmonids' in Luarca, Spain. I suggested that in addition to scientific challenges, a major challenge will be improving the links between ecologists, conservationists and policy makers. Because the Luarca symposium focused mainly on ecological research, little time was explicitly devoted to conservation. My objective in this paper is to further discuss the role of ecological research in informing salmonid conservation. I begin with a brief overview of research highlights from the symposium. I then use selected examples to show that ecological research has already contributed much towards informing salmonid conservation, but that ecologists will always be faced with limitations in their predictive ability. I suggest that conservation will need to move forward regardless of these limitations, and I call attention to some recent efforts wherein ecological research has played a crucial role. I conclude that ecologists should take urgent action to ensure that their results are available to inform resource managers, conservation organisations and policy makers regarding past losses and present threats to native, locally-adapted salmonid stocks. © 2010 John Wiley & Sons A/S.

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Piccolo, J. J. (2011, September). Challenges in the conservation, rehabilitation and recovery of native stream salmonid populations: Beyond the 2010 Luarca symposium. Ecology of Freshwater Fish. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0633.2010.00463.x

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