Sherbrooke Record

Orca survival depends on protecting chinook salmon

- By David Suzuki

Two of British Columbia’s most iconic species, chinook salmon and southern resident killer whales, are in trouble. The whale depends on the salmon for survival. Is it time to manage chinook fisheries with killer whales in mind?

In marine ecosystems, cause and effect is a challenge. It’s almost impossible to claim with certainty that depletion of one species is caused by abundance or lack of another. The general rule is that big things eat smaller things, so any given species will eat dozens of others, even their smaller kin. The southern resident killer whales, also known as orcas, are an exception. Despite their immense intelligen­ce, or perhaps because of it, their diet consists almost entirely of chinook salmon, with only traces of other salmon, and virtually no other fish species.

Every killer whale population has its own unique culture, which includes language, social behaviours and dietary preference­s. A large male weighs nearly as much as two Ford 150 pickup trucks. Sustaining this mass of warm-blooded flesh in a cold ocean requires using echolocati­on to find and capture fish in blackness. Understand­ing the patterns of their chinook prey is a highly specialize­d activity passed on through generation­s of learned behaviour.

After each capture, an orca normally shares the fish with the pod. That’s remarkable considerin­g the whale could practicall­y swallow the prey whole. If the 78 southern resident killer whales are to survive, this cultural feeding ritual needs to occur about 1,400 times a day. That’s become difficult, as chinook salmon population­s that migrate through waters where the southern resident killer whale feed are severely depleted, and the fish are smaller on average than they once were.

Fisheries and Oceans Canada’s assessment­s show most chinook population­s in southern B.C. are well below historical levels and continue to decline. In November 2018, the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada will determine the status of several population­s, and will likely declare many endangered.

Fishing is not the only threat chinook face, but it has a major impact. Fishing tends to target salmon as they return to spawn — after they’ve survived, against all odds, through 99 per cent of their expected lives. Those that spawn hold the genetic blueprint to help their offspring withstand current environmen­tal conditions. With far fewer chinook making it to spawning grounds, each survivor is a critical contributo­r to the next generation. Estimates show commercial and sport fisheries in British Columbia took more than half a million chinook in 2016. For some chinook population­s, people harvest well over half the returning fish.

Noise from shipping also hinders the whales’ ability to communicat­e with each other, find prey and avoid danger — by up to 97 per cent in the noisiest areas. Commercial shipping has increased dramatical­ly in recent years. One large ship transits the Salish Sea, on average, every hour of every day of every year.

Federal whale biologists have identified a priority recovery strategy: refuges where orcas can feed without competitio­n from fisheries and that are quiet enough that echolocati­on is not masked and social behaviours aren’t disrupted. These areas are currently being identified and could be establishe­d within killer whale critical habitat areas. Many other issues, including pollution, must also be addressed.

Rebuilding chinook population­s is critical to rebuilding whale population­s, yet there are no recovery plans to increase chinook population­s to upper benchmarks, as required by Canada’s Wild Salmon Policy. More than 300,000 recreation­al fishing licences are issued annually in B.C., which creates a formidable competitor to killer whales. Like whales, humans have also learned over generation­s about the behaviour of their prey.

The federal government is undertakin­g a scientific review to prioritize killer whale recovery actions. Part of this process involves public consultati­on. Anyone concerned about orcas should contribute.

Understand­ing the importance of chinook to killer whales makes it difficult to justify catching them without considerin­g the whales’ needs. The complexity of marine ecosystems makes it easy for individual­s to point fingers to the myriad other threats such as climate change and habitat destructio­n. But we must recognize that, collective­ly, our habits have become destructiv­e to the environmen­t and other species.

The fate of two of British Columbia’s most iconic animals and the ecosystems and economies that depend on them rests in our hands.

David Suzuki is a scientist, broadcaste­r, author and co-founder of the David Suzuki Foundation. Written with contributi­ons from David Suzuki Foundation Senior Research Scientist Scott Wallace. David Suzuki’s latest book is Just Cool It!: The Climate Crisis and What We Can Do (Greystone Books), cowritten with Ian Hanington.

Learn more at www.davidsuzuk­i.org

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