
Global
warming could deal big blow to salmon
By Hal Bernton
Seattle
Times staff reporter
April 4, 2007
Global warming is
expected to further weaken wild chinook salmon populations by changing
the temperatures and flows of major river systems, according to a study
published Thursday by the National Academy of Sciences.
Warmer waters in the
summer and early fall are expected to cause more disease, stress and
die-offs, while rain-swollen rivers in warmer winter months could flush
out salmon eggs from spawning gravel.
The study, by federal and
University
of
Washington
scientists, offers a
sobering perspective on the challenges that climate change creates for
the multibillion-dollar regional effort to restore wild salmon runs.
Many of the restoration
planners use models that do not account for warmer temperatures that are
expected to shrink the size of the annual snowpack and alter run-off
patterns.
Thus, they may generate
"misleading predictions of the relative benefits of different
recovery strategies," the study states.
The study focused on the
effects of global warming on the chinook populations of
Washington
's
Snohomish
River basin
. The researchers concluded
that by 2050 wild chinook populations would decline by 20 percent to 40
percent in the Snohomish. The range of decline depends on which of two
computer models was used in the analysis.
Researchers expect the
chinook declines would be similar in other
Western Washington
and
Oregon
drainages, though they
noted that some salmon could perhaps learn to alter their migration
timing to improve survival rates.
The study did not attempt
to assess the effects of climate change on other salmon species, or
salmon that spawn in the
Columbia
River basin
. But global warming also is expected to make life more difficult
for those fish.
"These hydrological
changes are not going to be good for any [salmon] species," said
Mary Ruckelshaus, a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA) fisheries scientist who was one of seven co-authors of the study.
Global warming is
expected to cause the biggest problems for salmon that spawn in the more
remote, higher-elevation river basins, according to the study. Salmon
eggs in those areas would be among the most vulnerable to sudden surges
in winter flows triggered by high-elevation rains. As spawning survival
rates there decline, salmon may concentrate more in the mid- to lower
reaches of the rivers, according to the study.
Though the authors
questioned the accuracy of salmon-recovery plans that did not account
for global warming, they still found plenty of value in restoration
efforts. In the Snohomish basin, a full-scale restoration that would
include tree planting, dike removal and other efforts could reduce the
climate-induced chinook decline to only 5 percent by 2050, according to
one computer forecast model. In the other model, the restoration efforts
were forecast to result in a 19 percent gain in spawning populations.
"That was the
encouraging and surprising result for us," Ruckelshaus said.
"The restoration plans — if they are carried out — can make a
difference."
Bob Lohn, the regional
administrator for NOAA fisheries, said the study underscored the need to
focus on restoration efforts.
"Let there be no
mistake, we're in this for the long haul," Lohn said.
Environmentalists already
have been citing climate change as a big threat to salmon, and the study
could give them new ammunition in their efforts to boost runs by
removing
Snake River
dams.
"I wish that they
would take a look at the snowpack availability out of the Rockies, and
see how that affects the probability that we can reverse the salmon's
decline without removing the dams," said Jim Martin, a former
Oregon state fishery official who is conservation director of the
Berkeley Conservation Institute.
Hal Bernton:
206-464-2581 or hbernton@seattletimes.com
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Source:
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