
Salmon
woes linked to weather
By JEFF
BARNARD
The
Associated Press
March 4, 2008
 |
| KURT
ROGERS / AP Fisheries officials say changes in weather
patterns meant little food for salmon. |
GRANTS PASS
,
Ore.
— Scientists examining
the sudden and widespread collapse of West Coast salmon returns are
pointing to the unusual changes in weather patterns that caused the
bottom to fall out of the ocean food web in 2005.
NOAA Fisheries Service
oceanographer Bill Peterson said Monday the juvenile salmon that left
their native rivers and entered the Pacific Ocean in 2005 found little
food being transported by the California Current, which flows from the
northern Pacific south along the West Coast.
The reason was that the
jet stream had shifted to the south, delaying the spring onset of winds
out of the north that create a condition known as upwelling, which
kick-starts the ocean food web by stirring the water from bottom to top,
the agency said.
"If there is no
upwelling, there is no phytoplankton growth, no zooplankton growth, and
basically you have no food chain that develops, because it all depends
on the upwelling," Peterson said from
Newport
.
"We are not
dismissing other potential causes for this year's low salmon
returns," Usha Varanasi,
NOAA
Fisheries
Service
Northwest
Science
Center
director, said in a
statement. "But the widespread pattern of low returns along the
West Coast for (both coho and chinook) salmon indicates an environmental
anomaly occurred in the
California Current
in 2005."
That was the year that
countless seabirds, showing signs of starvation, were washing up dead on
beaches, and nesting colonies were sparse. Off Oregon, water
temperatures near shore — where chinook spend much of their time in
the ocean — were 5 to 7 degrees warmer than normal and yielded about
one-fourth the usual amount of phytoplankton, the tiny plants that are
at the bottom of the food web.
Since then, upwelling has
been better, but not much, Peterson said.
However, he is looking
forward to this year being very good. This winter has been very unusual,
with temperatures colder and winds out of the north and west more
prevalent than normal, all of which indicate 2008 could be the best year
for upwelling since 2000, Peterson said.
Chinook returns in the
Sacramento River
in
California
last year were a third of
what biologists expected, and forecasts are for an all-time low this
year. Coho salmon returns to streams in
Oregon
and
California
were also lower than
expected.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those
who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for
non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more information go
to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Source:
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/
2004258296_salmon04m.html
|