Vancouver Sun

Salmon abundant in Pacific, but not in B.C. waters: scientists

- RANDY SHORE rshore@postmedia.com

Buried in the doom-and-gloom headlines about depleted salmon stocks and disastrous spawning returns is this nugget of truth: There are more salmon in the Pacific Ocean than at any time since 1925.

Russian fisheries will harvest 460,000 tonnes of chum and pink salmon this year, about 20 times Canada’s total haul of all five Pacific salmon species.

But the headlines aren’t necessaril­y wrong. The ocean is changing, just not to the benefit of the species prized in B.C., such as sockeye, coho and chinook.

The reappearan­ce of “The Blob” (a huge mass of warm water stretching from California to Alaska) could complicate their lives further. During its last appearance in 2014, millions of fish and seabirds perished.

The Russian research vessel Kaganovsky set out on a five-week grid-search test fishery in the North Pacific last February with a team of 21 scientists from Canada, Russia, the United States, South Korea and Japan.

They examined specific questions about the range, feeding habits and condition of adult salmon, and at least some of the answers are trickling in.

But expedition organizer Dick Beamish is now pressing hard to get a second expedition ready so they don’t miss an opportunit­y to study the effects of The Blob firsthand. He is also convinced that ocean-based stock assessment­s should be completed every year to accurately estimate salmon returns and manage fisheries, a model used with success by the Russians.

“Historical­ly, we have based our understand­ing of salmon on what we know about them when they leave fresh water and how many come back to spawn,” said Beamish. But salmon spend between one and four winters in the open ocean, depending on the species, and what happens to them during that time is anyone’s guess.

Good conditions and the availabili­ty of food for juvenile salmon in near-shore rearing areas is believed to be especially important for the ability of Fraser River salmon to survive their first winter, which appears to be borne out in preliminar­y data from the first expedition.

“We had guessed that the major mortality for salmon comes in their first ocean winter, and the abundance at that point gives you an idea of what kind of returns you can expect in the future,” he explained.

Fisheries and Oceans Canada had predicted about five million Fraser River sockeye would return in 2019, but only 600,000 made it.

“We had made an estimate of the number at about 870,000, so we were much more accurate,” said

Beamish. “We didn’t catch that many fish in the survey, but it was over a large enough area that we knew what to expect.”

Based on the test fisheries, Beamish expects the 2020 sockeye return will be equally dismal, although he is cautious about prediction­s based on a single survey. Beamish is making the rounds to foundation­s and corporate donors to raise $1.5 million for the second survey, which he hopes will sail early next year.

The B.C. Salmon and Restoratio­n and Innovation Fund has already promised $650,000 and the Pacific Salmon Foundation has pledged $300,000.

 ??  ?? Biological oceanograp­her Svetlana Esenkulova is among those who took part in a five-week grid-search test fishery in the North Pacific in February.
Biological oceanograp­her Svetlana Esenkulova is among those who took part in a five-week grid-search test fishery in the North Pacific in February.

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