J Semmens Welch_et_al_PNAS_full+SI.pdf (1.72 MB)
Download fileIn situ measurement of coastal ocean movements and survival of juvenile Pacific salmon
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-17, 07:14 authored by Welch, DW, Melnychuk, MC, Payne, JC, Rechisky, EL, Porter, AD, Jackson, GD, Ward, BR, Vincent, SP, Wood, CC, Jayson SemmensJayson SemmensMany salmon populations in both the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans have experienced sharply decreasing returns and high ocean mortality in the past two decades, with some populations facing extirpation if current marine survival trends continue. Our inability to monitor the movements of marine fish or to directly measure their survival precludes experimental tests of theories concerning the factors regulating fish populations, and thus limits scientific advance in many aspects of fisheries management and conservation. Here we report a large-scale synthesis of survival and movement rates of free-ranging juvenile salmon across four species, 13 river watersheds, and 44 release groups of salmon smolts (>3,500 fish tagged in total) in rivers and coastal ocean waters, including an assessment of where mortality predominantly occurs during the juvenile migration. Of particular importance, our data indicate that, over the size range of smolts tagged, (i) smolt survival was not strongly related to size at release, (ii) tag burden did not appear to strongly reduce the survival of smaller animals, and (iii) for at least some populations, substantial mortality occurred much later in the migration and more distant from the river of origin than generally expected. Our findings thus have implications for determining where effort should be invested to improve the accuracy of salmon forecasting, to understand the mechanisms driving salmon declines, and to predict the impact of climate change on salmon stocks.
History
Publication title
Proceedings of the National Academy of SciencesVolume
108Issue
21Pagination
8708-8713ISSN
1091-6490Department/School
Institute for Marine and Antarctic StudiesPublisher
National Academy of SciencesPlace of publication
USARights statement
Copyright 2011 National Academy of SciencesRepository Status
- Open