Salish Sea Marine Survival Project

Salish Sea Marine Survival Project

The Salish Sea Marine Survival Project: Canadian Program Summaries summarizes findings from the Pacific Salmon Foundation’s five year study on salmon declines in the Strait of Georgia.

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17 This initiative used the first-ever application of 3-D backpacks and the customized 'seal beanie.' Although seal beanies are commonly used to track seals, Thomas' innovation allowed us to study the interaction between seals and juvenile salmon, and provided the first ever direct measure of predation rates on individual salmon. 3. Determining harbour seal predation on juvenile salmon Harbour seals can consume a large number of juvenile Chinook and Coho Salmon when the fish first enter marine waters. But their rate of predation may not be as large as people speculate. Past estimates were based on only a couple of years of sampling scats from Cowichan Bay and other areas of the Strait of Georgia. Those studies used the hard parts that remained in the scat as means to identify the species eaten. The problem is that we were unable to determine the age, species, origin or numbers of salmon in these samples. A new research technique was devel- oped through the Salish Sea Marine Survival Project to directly estimate the rate of predation on a release of hatchery Coho Salmon from Big Qualicum Hatchery. This research study — conducted by the Marine Mammal Research Unit at University of British Columbia (UBC) un- der Dr. Andrew Trites in cooperation with BC Conservation Foundation — involved using DNA techniques to identify prey in seal scats, the development of 'seal beanies' to detect Passive Integrated Transponder (PIT ) tags placed in salmon, and the application of customized 3-D backpacks to track the activity, including the feeding behaviour, of these seals (Figure 3). The seal beanies are the creation of Austen Thomas and Brian Battaile, who were both PhD students at UBC during SSMSP. Thomas and Battaile designed a circular antenna for the beanie that could detect a PIT tag as a seal con- sumed it. When a seal fed on a tagged salmon and then hauled out of marine waters to rest, the tag's information captured by the beanie was automatically transmitted to a satellite, then down to Austen's lab at UBC. PIT tags emit a unique ID meaning salmon can be individually counted when consumed. Figure 2. BCCF staff PIT tagging juvenile Chinook on a purse seine in Cowichan Bay. Figure 3. Seal experts outfit an anaesthetized seal. No seals were harmed during the project. Photo by Dennis Frost.

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