Rockfish Species Trends in Puget Sound, Washington, USA, 2009–2023

Author:

Shelledy Katharine N.1,Olsen Amy Y.1ORCID,Tanz Alexander1,Williams Megan H.1ORCID,Christiansen Jeff2,Wilken Heidi3,Van Damme Chris4ORCID,Larson Shawn1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Seattle Aquarium, 1483 Alaskan Way, Seattle, WA 98101, USA

2. Independent Researcher, Ollala, WA 98359, USA

3. Point Defiance Zoo and Aquarium, 5400 N Pearl St, Tacoma, WA 98407, USA

4. Independent Researcher, Seattle, WA 98133, USA

Abstract

Rockfishes (Sebastes spp.) are a long-lived, understudied, multi-species fish assemblage in inland Washington (USA) waters. Driven by large-scale fishery removals in the 1970s, their numbers declined and have yet to recover, perhaps due to slow maturation and rare recruitment success. Since then, rockfish fishing restrictions have increased within Puget Sound, culminating in a 2010 total ban. Here, we analyze rockfish community trends (abundance and Shannon Diversity) within Puget Sound from 2009 to 2023. Our dataset includes 157 recorded dive transects from nine rocky or artificial reef habitats at depths 5–24 m throughout four Puget Sound basins: Admiralty Inlet (2 sites), Central Puget Sound (4 sites), Hood Canal (2 sites), and South Puget Sound (1 site). Significant differences in community species composition between basins were observed; we noted more Black (S. melanops), Yellowtail (S. flavidus), and Puget Sound (S. emphaeus) rockfish and fewer Brown rockfish (S. auriculatus) at sites in Admiralty Inlet vs. Central Puget Sound. Adult rockfish counts and Shannon Diversity varied seasonally, with higher rockfish counts and diversity indices in summer/autumn vs. winter/spring. Notably, we observed that total adult rockfish count per survey tended downward over time, driven partly by significant downward trends in Hood Canal Copper rockfish (S. caurinus) counts. We recommend continued monitoring and additional investigation into what factors besides fishing may be driving the trends reported here.

Funder

Pacific Northwest Zoos & Aquariums for underwater video equipment and the Foley Frischkorn Conservation Fund

Holly Reed Conservation Fund/Point Defiance Zoo Society

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference46 articles.

1. Love, M.S., Yoklavich, M., and Thorsteinson, L.K. (2002). The Rockfishes of the Northeast Pacific, University of California Press.

2. Palsson, W.A., Tsou, T.-S., Bargmann, G.G., Buckley, R.M., West, J.E., Mills, M.L., Cheng, Y.W., and Pacunski, R.E. (2023, April 15). The Biology and Assessment of Rockfishes in Puget Sound, Available online: https://wdfw.wa.gov/sites/default/files/publications/00926/wdfw00926.pdf.

3. Rockfish in Puget Sound: An Ecological Historiy of Exploitation;Williams;Mar. Policy,2010

4. Ray, T. (2023, April 15). Fishes of the Salish Sea. Artwork: Crylic on Canvas, 7 by 15 ft. Available online: https://www.trollart.com/2011/10/14/fishes-of-the-salish-sea-mural-at-uw/.

5. Results of an Ichthyological Survey about the San Juan Islands, Washington;Starks;Ann. Carnegie Mus.,1911

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