Marine ecosystem perspectives on Chinook salmon recruitment: a synthesis of empirical and modeling studies from a California upwelling system
Authored by Brian K Wells, Jarrod A Santora, Isaac D Schroeder, Nathan Mantua, William J Sydeman, David D Huff, John C Field
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.3354/meps11757
Sponsors:
United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
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Abstract
We review the suite of biophysical factors in the Northeast Pacific
Ocean basin and California Current shelf ecosystem that directly or
indirectly relate to central California Chinook salmon Oncorhynchus
tshawytscha growth and survival upon ocean entry, a critical
life-history period for this population. Our synthesis provides a
framework for integrating ecosystem process studies with empirical
hypothesis testing to benefit fisheries management. Our hypothesis
includes seasonality (phenology) as a key element of early salmon growth
and survival. The strength and location of the North Pacific High (NPH)
pressure system in winter influences salmon growth and survival via
`bottom-up' productivity and retention of key prey (euphausiid
crustaceans and juvenile rockfishes Sebastes spp.) in nearshore habitats
prior to and during salmon emigration to sea in spring. Prey retention, which is associated with increased consumption of krill and juvenile
rockfishes, and is positively correlated with juvenile salmon body
condition and ocean survival, appears to set cohort strength and return
rates. We examined these mechanistic relationships by reviewing the
results of a biophysical model coupled to an individual-based model for
salmon. Our review results in a final hypothesis stating that early
salmon growth and survival are positively related to intensity of early
season upwelling, and associated (forage) nekton production and
retention on the shelf during spring and summer.
Tags
Interannual variability
Oncorhynchus-tshawytscha
Stock
assessment
To-end models
Northern california
Ocean
conditions
Population-complex
Juvenile salmon
Columbia river
Central valley