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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30 At the same time, many other changes have occurred: dogfish are more widely distributed, young of year herring are larger and pollock are more abundant. The larger size of young herring may have a negative impact, due to limits of the mouth size of juvenile Chinook and Coho since many may be unable to switch to feeding on these important prey. CONDITIONS SINCE 2017 During 2017, physical oceanographic processes associated with the marine heat wave reverted to more normal conditions. The 2017 Strait of Georgia spring bloom had close to average start timing, and phytoplankton community composition in the Strait also showed a return to a more normal distribution. However, although surface temperatures in the Strait of Georgia from May to September 2017 were below the observations for 2015-16, they were still above average for the previous 30 years. These continued higher temperatures may have contributed to some ongoing impacts in the Strait. For example, biomass of most zooplankton groups, including jellies, remained above average; spring spawning biomass of Pacific Herring showed near historic high levels; and Northern Anchovy continued to be abundant in the Strait of Georgia. Since 2017, new heat waves have been observed again in the North Pacific. Warming of both offshore and coastal waters has led to changes in the food web and coast wide decreases in Chinook Salmon as well as low returns of Fraser River Sockeye Salmon. SUMMARY In summary, the story is complex. Warming waters in the Strait of Georgia over the course of SSMSP are conditions that are outside of our experience, and that likely have created a mixture of positive and negative outcomes for salmon. We did see some negative impacts on stocks that entered the Pacific Ocean during the presence of the Blob, with results such as a coast-wide decline of Sockeye Salmon returns in 2017, and generally negative outcomes for BC's central and south coast salmon. However, increasing Coho residency led to many anglers in the Strait being able to take advantage of the first Coho fishing opportunity around the Strait of Georgia in some years. Our challenge now is to try and understand the relative consequences of these complex conditions. Having the SSMSP studies occur during years when the early marine period appeared to provide particularly good feeding and rearing conditions for Coho and Chinook within the Strait, but likely negative impacts outside of the Strait, is a key consideration for our analyses and understanding. Figure 7. Northern Anchovy displaying an unusual increase in the Strait of Georgia since 2015. Image provided by Ryan Miller. Figure 8. Herring are a primary fish prey for Coho and Chinook: but YOY herring are at or above the pretty length threshold for most Chinook. Photo by Will Duguid, UVic.

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