
Ocean
Conditions: Do
Columbia
And
Alaska
Chinook Go To The Same Place?
Columbia
Basin
Bulletin
April 11, 2008
Blame for declining runs
of
Pacific Northwest
salmon has been cast
broadly: habitat loss from logging and development, an abundance of
predatory sea lions, power-generating dams, terns and other coastal
birds that prey on juvenile fish, and over-fishing by commercial and
sport fishermen.
But no factor is more
critical to salmon prosperity than ocean conditions, experts say, and
the complex interaction between biologically distinct groups of salmon
and changing ocean habitats has created challenges for resource
managers.
At the same time a
projected huge run of spring chinook salmon are entering the
Columbia River
, fishing on one of its
major tributaries -- the
Willamette
River
-- has been closed because
of a low estimate of returning fish. And offshore salmon seasons are
either shut down or sharply curtailed along the entire West Coast this
spring and summer because of a projected historic low return of fish to
the
Sacramento
River basin
.
The common denominator in
the good and bad runs is the ocean.
Bill Peterson, a
fisheries biologist with NOAA who is based at
Oregon
State
University
's
Hatfield
Marine
Science
Center
, says this year's salmon
debacle can be traced back to unusual ocean conditions in 2005. A delay
in the ocean upwelling caused ocean conditions "to collapse."
"The delayed
upwelling off the
Oregon
coast meant that in the
critical time when juvenile salmon were entering the ocean, there was
nothing for them to eat – and most of them died," said Peterson,
who is a courtesy professor in OSU's
College
of
Oceanic
and Atmospheric Sciences.
"But you don't see the impact until two or three years later, when
the fish should first begin returning as adults."
Wind-driven upwelling
brings nutrients from deeper water to the surface and fuels
phytoplankton blooms. Lipid-rich copepods and other zooplankton feed on
the tiny plants, and in turn are consumed by anchovies, sardines,
herring and other small fish that are staples in the diet of salmon and
other fish. The delay in upwelling was caused by late arrival of
seasonal winds, according to researchers at OSU, who published their
findings in the Proceedings of the
National
Academy
.
The delayed upwelling can
explain why most fish runs are plummeting, yet fisheries managers are
predicting a huge number of spring chinook bound for the
Columbia River
this year. Why? The answer,
Peterson says, can be found by tracing where juveniles from different
river systems go once they enter the ocean.
For the past 10 years,
Peterson has participated in a research project funded by the Bonneville
Power Administration that analyzes the distribution of juvenile salmon
off the West Coast and uses genetic tracking to determine their river
origin. Juvenile fish from many of
Oregon
's coastal rivers, along with those from the
Willamette
River
and the
Sacramento River
, congregate just off the
Oregon
coast once they leave their
river systems.
When the ocean collapse
came in 2005, most of those fish starved.
"But
Columbia River
spring chinook don't stay
off the
Oregon
coast," Peterson said.
"In our 10 years of sampling, we've only caught a few
Columbia River
juveniles just off our
coast, so it's obvious they go somewhere else. If you look this year at
chinook salmon in
Alaska
, they're doing well. So
it's possible that
Columbia River
juveniles head to the same
place as
Alaska
juveniles."
Peterson speculates that
perhaps young
Columbia River
salmon may migrate toward a
unique ecosystem several hundred miles off the Northwest coast. In that
deep, cold water, lipid-rich fishes known as myctophids, or
"lantern-fish," provide a bountiful diet for a variety of
marine life. These fishes are "very abundant" in the
mesopelagic zone, he added, and could provide a rich forage base for
young chinook salmon.
"It's just a theory
at this point," he said. "We need to go out there and sample
for juvenile salmon. But the situation this year underscores how
fascinating research on salmon can be. We used to have a lot more
genetic diversity in our salmon runs. They used to spawn at different
times and hang out offshore at different times. We may be paying for the
loss of that diversity."
Ocean conditions off
Oregon
in 2006 and 2007 were
somewhat better for salmon survival, but still were less than ideal. The
good news, Peterson says, is that the influence of La Niña over the
winter has created what appear to be excellent ocean conditions thus far
in 2008. But, he added, it's premature to celebrate.
"The system can't
recover from a near-complete collapse in one year," Peterson
warned. "There may not be enough adults in the streams to
repopulate the runs. We need three or four years of good conditions
before we can breathe a little easier."
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Source:
http://www.cbbulletin.com/Free/269972.aspx
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