The Guardian (Charlottetown)

New search for missing fish

The disappeari­ng salmon of the Miramichi River: Four new research grants seek answers

- BY KEVIN BISSETT

New Brunswick’s famous Miramichi River was once the largest salmon-producing river in North America, drawing the famous and the powerful keen to fly fish there.

But the number of salmon are dropping at an alarming rate they are now a fraction of what they were in the 90s - and scientists are not entirely sure why.

“If I had one answer, I think that would make a lot of people happy,” said Tommi Linnansaar­i, the new Atlantic Salmon Research chair at the University of New Brunswick.

UNB announced Friday it is undertakin­g four research projects to get accurate salmon population numbers - and to understand how those numbers are affected by climate change.

“The things that will be learned there are applicable globally. This is one of the great strengths of what we’re doing,” said Fred Whoriskey, chairman of the Canadian Rivers Institute management board.

Whoriskey said the salmon numbers are at the lowest levels he has ever seen in the Miramichi.

According to figures from the Department of Fisheries and Ocean, the river’s salmon population has declined by 26 per cent over the last 12 years.

“And that’s down substantia­lly from years earlier,” said Linnansaar­i. “We are talking about perhaps 10,000 to 20,000 fish in a river that would have sustained 100,000 or more salmon in the 1990s.”

He said while the numbers fluctuate from year to year, it’s alarming when you see years like 2014 when the salmon in the Miramichi only met 22 per cent of what they were hoping to see to maintain conservati­on of the salmon.

Currently, Atlantic salmon fishing in the Miramichi is restricted to fly fishing only and all large salmon caught must be released alive to protect the spawning population. There is also a First Nations food fishery for salmon.

Whoriskey said the decline can be blamed on everything from warming water temperatur­es to predator fish like striped bass. He said it’s hoped the research in New Brunswick can help Atlantic salmon population­s in Europe, in Newfoundla­nd, Quebec and elsewhere.

He said globally the numbers are even more disturbing - noting the size of salmon runs across North America last year were down 30 to 50 per cent from the year before.

“Global warming is the gorilla in the room. Temperatur­es are changing faster than the species has had to evolve and adapt to in past history. We are riding this one and it is a wild ride indeed,” he said.

Just this week, the Atlantic Salmon Federation announced that for the first time since it began monitoring New Brunswick’s Magaguadav­ic River in 1992, no wild salmon had returned from the sea. Despite a stocking program going back to 2002, the Fisheries Department said the population had been dropping steadily since estimating it at 900 wild salmon in 1983.

 ?? CP PHOTO/UNIVERSITY OF NEW BRUNSWICK, ROB BLANCHARD ?? Tommi Linnansaar­i, a research associate with the Canadian Rivers Institute at the University of New Brunswick and the new UNB CAST Atlantic Salmon Research Chair, poses by the Saint John River in Fredericto­n in a September 13, 2017, handout photo. He...
CP PHOTO/UNIVERSITY OF NEW BRUNSWICK, ROB BLANCHARD Tommi Linnansaar­i, a research associate with the Canadian Rivers Institute at the University of New Brunswick and the new UNB CAST Atlantic Salmon Research Chair, poses by the Saint John River in Fredericto­n in a September 13, 2017, handout photo. He...

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