Affiliation:
1. Auke Bay Laboratories, Alaska Fisheries Science Center, Ted Stevens Marine Research Institute NOAA Fisheries Juneau Alaska USA
2. College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences University of Alaska Fairbanks Juneau Alaska USA
3. Alaska Fisheries Science Center NOAA Fisheries Seattle Washington USA
Abstract
AbstractClimate change is altering the distribution and abundance of marine species, especially in Arctic and sub‐Arctic regions. In the eastern Bering Sea, home of the world's largest run of sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka), juvenile sockeye salmon abundance has increased and their migration path shifted north with warming, 2002–2018. The reasons for these changes are poorly understood. For these sockeye salmon, we quantify environmental and biological covariate effects within spatio‐temporal species distribution models. Spatio‐temporally, with respect to juvenile sockeye salmon densities: (1) sea surface temperature had a nonlinear effect, (2) large copepod, Calanus, a minor prey item, had no effect, (3) age‐0 pollock (Gadus chalcogrammus), a major prey item during warm years, had a positive linear effect, and (4) juvenile pink salmon (O. gorbuscha) had a positive linear effect. Temporally, annual biomass of juvenile sockeye salmon was nonlinearly related to sea temperature and positively related to age‐0 pollock and juvenile pink salmon abundance. Results indicate that sockeye salmon distributed with and increased in abundance with increases in prey, and reached a threshold for optimal temperatures in the eastern Bering Sea. Changes in population dynamics and distribution of sockeye salmon in response to environmental variability have potential implications for projecting specific future food securities and management of fisheries in Arctic waters.
Funder
North Pacific Research Board
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Arctic-Yukon-Kuskokwim Sustainable Salmon Initiative
Alaska Department of Fish and Game
Alaska Fisheries Science Center
Reference72 articles.
1. Akima H. Gebhardt A. Petzold T. &Maechler M.(2016).Package ‘akima’. Version 0.6‐2.
2. Alaska Fisheries Science Center (AFSC). (2021).AFSC/ABL: Eastern Bering Sea (BASIS) Coastal Research on Juvenile Fish.
3. Effects of warm and cold climate conditions on capelin (Mallotus villosus) and Pacific herring (Clupea pallasii) in the eastern Bering Sea
4. Ontogeny matters: Climate variability and effects on fish distribution in the eastern Bering Sea
5. Competitive interactions between pink salmon and other juvenile Pacific salmon in the strait of Georgia;Beamish R. J.;North Pacific Anadromous Fish Commission Document,2010