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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18 In 2015, PSF funded the deployment of 20 beanies on seals near Big Qualicum Hatchery, in Deep Bay, and in other local seal rookeries. The seals living near the Big Qualicum River hatchery had the opportunity to feed on 36,900 Coho smolts containing PIT tags. Seals began feeding on tagged Coho during the first night after their release from the hatchery. The data were immediately transmitted back to UBC. After years of development, the system worked perfectly. Results of the study showed that only some of the seals appeared to be specialised feeders on juvenile salmon, that they fed mostly at dusk, and overall, only 6.1% of the tagged Coho were preyed upon by these local seals. 4. Using Citizen Scientists to assess oceanographic conditions One of the serious challenges in studying marine waters is how to determine what is happening in different places at the same time — in other words being 'everywhere at once.' Typically, large oceanographic vessels conduct annual surveys in limited number of places a few times a year. Dr. Eddy Carmack, a retired scientist from the Institute of Ocean Sciences in Sidney, BC, came up with the idea of equipping small private vessels that would follow specified sampling schedules and locations to capture the dynamics of the Salish Sea. This "citizen science" fleet became our answer to how to essentially be "everywhere at once" and capture the fine-scale dynamics of the Strait of Georgia. Vessels from local communities were contracted and then outfitted with the equipment necessary to conduct surveys (Figure 6). This "mosquito fleet" has been operating since 2015, sampling 2 -3 days per month in 8-10 overlapping areas of the Strait. In one day, these citizen scientists collect oceanographic data, plankton and water samples from about 60 sites (Figure 7). The data collected are then transmitted automatically via a mobile app called Community Fishers. The app, developed by Ocean Network Canada (ONC), allows fishers and volunteer citizens to upload data to ONC's world-leading data management system, Oceans 2.0. From there, the data are archived, processed and visualized for scientists and the public around the world (Figure 8). Figure 6. Steveston Citizen Scientist Billy McMillan lowers a secchi disk into the water to test for turbidity or water murkiness. Murkiness can block light and prevent plants that support salmon prey from growing. Figure 4. An outfitted seal heads back to sea. Photos by Dennis Frost. Figure 5. A close-up of the beanie and 3D-backpacks. Pit-Tag Reader Accelerometer Magnetometer Depth Temperature Liminosity Salinity

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