The Province

Glacial retreat both good and bad for Pacific salmon

- RANDY SHORE rshore@postmedia.com

The 16,000-year retreat of glaciers in North America left vast and diverse freshwater habitats for Pacific salmon species, but for some watersheds the golden age of salmon is about to end.

As some glaciers finally melt out of existence, the volume and cooling effect of runoff water will disappear along with them, creating significan­t challenges for salmon runs in the southern half of B.C., according to a new study from Simon Fraser University.

Species such as sockeye and chinook are particular­ly

“picky” about water temperatur­e as they migrate upriver to spawn, said lead author Kara Pitman, a PhD candidate. Warmer water can lead to exhaustion and death on a journey that can be 50 to 1,000 kilometres long.

Around 85 per cent of watersheds in western North America still have some glacial coverage, but those ice sheets are predicted to lose 80 per cent of their volume by the end of this century.

“The retreat of glaciers has accelerate­d with climate change. So that becomes a bit more alarming,” said Pitman.

The Earth’s temperatur­e has been rising generally since about 1850 — the end of the Little Ice Age and the last glacial maximum — but warming has recently accelerate­d.

The extinction of glaciers in the upper Thompson and Fraser River watersheds could lead to higher summer water temperatur­es that negatively impact adult spawners and young salmon that rear in fresh water, the study says.

“Salmon still exist in parts of the world where there are no glaciers,” she said. “They aren’t defined by glaciers, but they are enhanced by glaciers.”

All the Pacific salmon species evolved during a non-glacial period and survived the last ice age by exploiting whatever small refuges they could find, explained Pitman.

“If given enough time, salmon are well-adapted to cope with the landscape changes associated with glacier retreat,” she said. “Once glaciers aren’t the main drivers of stream flow, juveniles can find offshoots and eddies to rear in.”

Nearly all the glaciers in B.C. have retreated to the point where they are no longer revealing new habitat suitable for salmon, but that isn’t the case everywhere.

In places that are still dominated by glaciers, such as south-central Alaska, glacial retreat is likely to open up new salmon habitat in low-lying valleys, rivers and lakes, she said.

The vast majority of salmon return to spawn in the streams where they were born, but pink salmon and chum are more prone to straying and could be first to colonize new habitat.

A postglacia­l future won’t necessaril­y be bad for salmon as a species — their abundance is at a historical peak in the Pacific Ocean — but the proportion­s of pinks and chum compared with sockeye, chinook and coho could be altered.

 ??  ?? Glaciers are retreating at an accelerati­ng rate in the face of climate change.
Glaciers are retreating at an accelerati­ng rate in the face of climate change.

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