Please select your home edition
Edition
Stoneways Marine 2021 - LEADERBOARD

Recovering marine mammals increase pressure on West Coast salmon

by Michael Milstein / NOAA Fisheries 2 Dec 2017 17:14 UTC
A young resident killer whale chases a Chinook salmon in the Salish Sea near San Juan Island, Washington State, in September 2017. Image obtained under NMFS permit #19091 © John Durban, Holly Fearnbach and Lance Barrett-Lennard

Recovering populations of sea lions, harbour seals, and other marine mammals on the West Coast are eating more and more Chinook salmon, and their consumption may now exceed the combined harvest by commercial and recreational fisheries, a new study finds.

While the recovery of sea lions, harbour seals and many killer whales represents a conservation success, it creates complex tradeoffs for managers also charged with protecting the salmon they prey on and providing commercial and recreational fishing opportunities, the study concludes. The U.S. Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 protects all marine mammals, including whales, seals and sea lions, while the Endangered Species Act protects nine West Coast populations of Chinook salmon.

A collaboration of federal, state, tribal, and academic researchers from Oregon State University, NOAA Fisheries and other institutions The next link/button will exit from NWFSC web site published the findings this week in the journal Scientific Reports. Researchers designed the study in part to probe factors affecting Chinook salmon that endangered Southern Resident Killer whales rely on for prey.

In contrast to most resident killer whales that are multiplying and consuming more salmon, Southern Residents are struggling. They spend much of the year in the inland waters of Washington and consume about as much salmon today as 40 years ago, the study found. The study suggests that, at least in recent years, competition with other marine mammals may be more of a problem for Southern Residents than competition with human fisheries, and may be limiting growth of the whale population.

"Salmon are such a central part of the ecosystem that there's a lot of demand on them, and the Southern Residents that depend on them are only one of many mouths at the table," said Mike Ford, director of the Conservation Biology Division at NOAA Fisheries' Northwest Fisheries Science Center and a coauthor of the new research.

The study used models to estimate marine mammal consumption of Chinook salmon based on several assumptions about their diet and the size and weight of salmon. The researchers estimate that from 1975 to 2015, the yearly biomass of Chinook salmon consumed by sea lions, seals, and killer whales increased from 6,100 to 15,200 metric tons, and from five to 31.5 million individual salmon.

Over the same time span, they found that the annual Chinook harvest by fishermen decreased from 16,400 to 9,600 metric tons, and from 3.6 million to 2.1 million individual fish. (While marine mammal consumption includes many juvenile salmon, fishermen harvest only adults.)

The study estimated that several growing populations of resident killer whales in Canada and southeast Alaska consume the largest biomass of Chinook salmon, while harbour seals consume the largest number of individual fish.

Salmon recovery programs up and down the West Coast have boosted numbers of wild salmon, the research found. However, increased predation by marine mammals may be offsetting reductions in recreational and commercial harvests, and "masking the success of coast-wide recovery efforts," the scientists wrote.

Isaac Kaplan, a research fishery biologist at the Northwest Fisheries Science Center and a coauthor of the study, said the researchers quantified only one of many challenges for salmon.

"The better we understand the different obstacles to salmon recovery, the better we can account for them as we plan and carry out recovery programs," Kaplan said. "Recovery efforts must account for all of these challenges, and we're providing more details about one important part of that picture."

Marine mammals prey heavily on salmon from the Columbia River, the study found. In 2015 researchers found that harbour seals consumed 14 metric tons of Chinook salmon, while California and Steller sea lions consumed 219 and 227 metric tons, respectively. In terms of individual fish, harbour seals consumed about 1,000 adult Chinook salmon, while California sea lions consumed 46,000, and Steller sea lions consumed 47,000.

"Consumption in the ocean is also a significant source of mortality, but has been largely unmeasured until now," said Brandon Chasco, a NOAA Fisheries-Sea Grant Population Dynamics Fellow in the Department of Fisheries and Wildlife at Oregon State University and lead author of the study. "Now managers have more information to work with in balancing these difficult tradeoffs."

Study collaborators included researchers at NOAA Fisheries' Northwest Fisheries Science Center in Seattle, Smith-Root, a fisheries conservation technology firm in Vancouver, Washington; Western Washington University; Makah Fisheries Management in Neah Bay, Washington; the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife; and the North Gulf Oceanic Society in Homer, Alaska.

Related Articles

Plastic pollution from Amazon deliveries up 29%
Oceana calls on Amazon to commit to reduce use of plastic packaging Report finds that up to 23.5 million pounds of the company's plastic packaging polluted the world's waterways and oceans in 2020, and finds that Amazon's recycling promises do not help to reduce plastic pollution. Posted on 16 Dec 2021
The Secret Life of Fish
A new book by the Head of Development for BBC's Natural History Unit - Doug Mackay-Hope Discover the astonishing truth about our underwater friends: how they think and what they know, their experiences and unique behaviours, and the many things we have in common. Posted on 17 Aug 2021
California may soon unravel controversial nets
A long battle against a controversial type of fishing gear Ocean activists seem to be on the eve of winning a long battle against a controversial type of fishing gear that has been banned in most of world's oceans. But many fishermen are not ready to let go of what has been a reliable method for catching Posted on 9 Nov 2018
America's Water Infrastructure Act of 2018
President Donald Trump signs the bipartisan measure President Donald Trump yesterday signed the America's Water Infrastructure Act of 2018. The bipartisan measure, which passed the Senate 99-1 earlier this month, authorizes the Water Resources Development Act of 2018. Posted on 26 Oct 2018
New addition to enjoying swimming off your boat!
New addition to enjoying swimming off your boat! Ocean Guardian electric shark deterrent device. Finally, there is a way to protect your loved ones and guests while swimming around your boat. Introducing the Ocean Guardian Boat01, the world's first electrical shark deterrent designed specifically for boats to change your boating experience. Posted on 22 Sep 2018
Testing new solution to fight toxic red tide
Florida's toxic red tide At least seven counties in Florida are under a state of emergency for a toxic algae bloom that has killed thousands of marine animals. But researchers at a lab in Sarasota say they have a machine that can fight the red tide. Posted on 1 Sep 2018
Caribbean reef fish conservation efforts
Protecting the endangered and iconic Nassau grouper For more than 20 years, conservationists have been working to protect one of the most recognizable reef fish in the Caribbean, the endangered and iconic Nassau grouper. Posted on 16 Jul 2018
How this whale got nearly 20 pounds of plastic
A small male pilot whale was found struggling, unable to swim or breathe Last week, a small male pilot whale was found struggling, unable to swim or breathe, in a Thai canal near the Malaysia border. Posted on 10 Jun 2018
A 'deadly moustache'
This terrifying venomous fish is armed with switchblades under its eyes Stonefish are already pretty badass – they're the most venomous type of fish we know of, and have a number of sharp fin spines on their body that can unsheathe and attack you at a moment's notice. Posted on 19 Apr 2018
Pantaenius 2022 - SAIL & POWER 1 FOOTER ROWHenri-Lloyd - For the ObsessedGJW Direct - Yacht 2019 - Footer