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Abnormal Migration Timing and High en route Mortality of Sockeye Salmon in the Fraser River, British Columbia
199
Citations
25
References
2004
Year
BiologyFraser RiverEngineeringFishery ScienceGlobal HealthAquacultureAbnormal Migration TimingNatural Resource ManagementBritish ColumbiaEarly MigrationPopulation MigrationFishery ManagementMortality RatesPublic HealthPeak MigrationConservation Biology
Since 1995, several stocks of Fraser River sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) have begun upriver spawning migrations significantly earlier than previously observed. In some years, the timing of peak migration has shifted more than 6 weeks. Coincident with this early migration are high levels of en route and pre-spawning mortality, occasionally exceeding 90%. These phenomena pose risks to the perpetuation of these fisheries resources. At present, although there are many competing hypotheses (e.g., energetics, osmoregulatory dysfunction, oceanic conditions, parasites) that may account for early migration and high mortality, there are no definitive answers, nor any causal evidence that link these issues. With poor predictive ability in the face of uncertainty, fisheries managers have been unable to effectively allocate harvest quotas, while ensuring that sufficient fish are able to not only reach the spawning sites, but also successfully reproduce. If trends in mortality rates continue, several important sockeye salmon fisheries and stocks could collapse. Indeed, one sockeye stock has already been emergency listed as endangered under Canadian legislation.
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