Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byHelena Stone Modified over 9 years ago
1
Information from Archival Tags on Salmon in the Bering Sea, 2003-2006 Robert Walker, Kate Myers, Nancy Davis School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences University of Washington, USA Jack Helle, Jim Murphy NOAA Fisheries Auke Bay Lab Shigehiko Urawa National Salmon Resources Center, Japan & NPAFC Olga Temnykh, Vladimir Sviridov TINRO-Centre, Russia Vladimir Fedorenko North Pacific Anadromous Fish Commission NPRB Project R0204 NPAFC Salmon Tagging PI: Jack Helle Vladimir Fedorenko
2
Acknowledgments North Pacific Research Board (NPRB) North Pacific Anadromous Fish Commission (NPAFC) NOAA/National Marine Fisheries Service, AFSC/ABL Fisheries Research Agency; National Salmon Resources Center; HNFRI (Japan) Pacific Scientific Research Fisheries Centre (TINRO), KamchatNIRO (Russia) Department of Fisheries and Oceans (Canada)
3
BASIS “The Bering-Aleutian Salmon International Survey (BASIS) is NPAFC's coordinated program of cooperative research on Pacific salmon in the Bering Sea that was designed to clarify the mechanisms of biological response by salmon to the conditions caused by climate changes. Seasonal-specific migration patterns of salmon and their relation to the Bering Sea ecosystem Key biological, climatic, and oceanographic factors affecting long-term changes in Bering Sea food production and salmon growth rates” R0303 - NPAFC Cooperative Research: Use of genetic stock identification to determine the distribution, migration, early marine survival, and relative stock abundance of sockeye and chum salmon in the Bering Sea www.npafc.org
4
Tag Types: Lotek LTD_1100 (temperature, depth) AlphaMach iBLite, iBKrill (temperature) StarOddi DST CTD (salinity, temperature, depth) Lotek LTD_2400 (temperature, depth, light/geolocation)
5
Live Box for Trawl
6
Offshore archival tagging cruise tracks, 2003-2006 = Wakatake maru = Kaiyo maru = Miller Freeman
7
NPAFC/NPRB DST releases and recoveries, 2003-2006 recovery rates (Overall INPFC/NPAFC disk tag recovery rate, 1955-2000: 3.8%) Total releases: 637 Total recoveries: 50 Overall: 7.8%
8
Releases and Recoveries by Species recovery rates
9
Recoveries of NPAFC / NPRB DSTs released in the Bering Sea, North Pacific, and Gulf of Alaska 2 1 2 1 16 1 3 21 1 1 4 1 2 1 1 1
10
Key to data charts recuperation period diel behavior pattern Temperature Depth
11
Temperatures can help indicate changes in water mass Depths relatively constant; Fish may be choosing depth range, not temperature
12
Yukon Chinook - 2 Year Data Record
13
Night: near surface Day: few, large vertical movements
14
Night: 25 m below surface Day: small vertical movements, comes to the surface
15
Night: 25 m below surface Day: 100 m below surface
16
Comparison of Winters
17
Deep Dive Periods after Winter April-May 2003 February-May 2004
18
Proportion of Chinook By-Catch, EBS Trawl Fishing by season, age, and depth, 1997-1999 Jan-FebSept-Oct Ocean ages.1.2.3-.5 All Ages.1.2.3-.4 All Ages N=392792,1972,5153681,4555172,340 Depths 0-25.01.02 25-50.80.42.58.57.33.19.24.22 50-100.10.25.31.30.36.58.62.56 100-200.03.05.02.30.23.14.22 200-300.08.27.06.09.01 40-80% at 50-400 m, slightly deeper Sept-Oct, more older fish in winter, younger in summer-fall
19
age 1.2age 1.3age 1.4 ImmatureMaturing
21
Sockeye Shallow dives (20-30 m) Weak to moderate diurnal pattern
22
Bering Sea Pink Salmon
23
Strong diurnal pattern May remain deep during day Moderate depth (40- 60m)
24
Coho Diurnal pattern variable Sometimes remains below surface 30-70 m dives, to > 100 m
25
NMaxAvg Daily Min Sockeye12830 Pink3741 Coho10970 Chum112531 Chinook234417 Maximum and Average Minimum Depths (m) on Data Tags
26
Av Night Max Av Day Max Avg Daily Max Sockeye132021 Pink193637 Coho294246 Chum335658 Chinook84125130 Avg Night Avg Day AvgDay-Night difference Sockeye3441 Pink413108 Coho812115 Chum8201613 Chinook4043423
27
Summary Generally relatively shallow (to 30-60 m); some deep dives by chum and chinook Species differences Depth ranges often relatively constant while temperature ranges vary; possible selection for depth, not temperature? Note: most data are from maturing fish; Possible changes in behavior with stage of maturity indicated by 1 tag
28
Suggestions for the Future Tag more immature salmon Tag later in fall, for better chances of recoveries of immature salmon Tag earlier in spring, for better coverage of returning stocks Use geolocation tags
29
Thank you! …Keep looking for high seas salmon tags!
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.