
NOAA
Scientists Studying Impacts of Anomaly in
California Current
in 2005
Columbia
Basin
Bulletin
March 7, 2008
NOAA scientists are
reviewing unusual environmental conditions in the
Pacific Ocean
as the likely culprit for
the dramatically low returns of chinook and coho salmon to rivers and
streams along the West Coast of the
United States
in 2007.
Researchers from NOAA's
Northwest and Southwest Fisheries Science Centers are comparing data on
the low food production of the California Current in 2005 that occurred
when this year's and 2007's returning salmon would have been entering
the ocean from their natal streams to feed and grow.
The cold waters of the
California Current
flow southward from the
northern Pacific along the West Coast and are associated with upwelling,
an ocean condition caused by winds that bring nutrients to the ocean's
surface and is the main source of nourishment for the ocean's food web.
In 2005 a southward shift
in the jet stream, delayed favorable winds and upwelling for the
California Current
, which normally begins in
spring. The winds instead arrived in mid-July, causing high surface
water temperatures and very low nutrient production within the nearshore
marine ecosystem.
"We are not
dismissing other potential causes for this year's low salmon
returns," said Usha Varanasi,
NOAA
Fisheries
Service
Science
Center
director for the Northwest
Region. "But the widespread pattern of low returns along the West
Coast for two species of salmon indicates an environmental anomaly
occurred in the
California Current
in 2005."
Data released Thursday by
the Pacific Fisheries Management Council indicate the 2007 returns of
fall chinook salmon to the
Sacramento River
in
California
's
Central Valley
were approximately 33
percent of what fishery biologists expected. Projections for 2008 are
substantially lower than last year's estimate.
Coho salmon returning to
spawning streams in
California
and
Oregon
are also considerably lower
than predicted. A preliminary analysis found an average 27 percent of
the parental stock returning in 12 streams monitored in
California
. Even though coho returns
appear to improve along the coast from south to north,
Oregon
Coast
coho salmon had less than
30 percent of their parental stock return.
Coho salmon are listed as
either endangered or threatened under the Endangered Species Act in the
Central/Northern California and
Southern Oregon
watersheds.
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Source:
http://www.cbbulletin.com/Free/264138.aspx
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