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Winter ichthyoplankton biomass as a predictor of early summer prey fields and survival of juvenile salmon in the northern California Current

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Title Winter ichthyoplankton biomass as a predictor of early summer prey fields and survival of juvenile salmon in the northern California Current
Names Daly, Elizabeth A. (creator)
Auth, Toby D. (creator)
Brodeur, Richard D. (creator)
Peterson, William T. (creator)
Date Issued 2013-06-12 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work.
This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by Inter-Research and can be found at: http://www.int-res.com/home/.
Abstract Diets of juvenile coho Oncorhynchus kisutch and Chinook O. tshawytscha salmon
are made up primarily of winter-spawning fish taxa in the late-larval and early juvenile stages that
are undersampled in plankton and larger trawl nets. Although we have no direct measure of the
availability of fish prey important to juvenile salmon during early marine residence, we do have
data on the larval stage of their prey that may be used as a surrogate for the later stages. Data on
these prey items were obtained from ichthyoplankton samples collected along the Newport Oregon
Hydrographic line (44.65° N) during January–March in 1998–2010. We explored winter biomass
of prey fish larvae as a potential indicator of marine feeding conditions for young salmon the
following spring. The proportion of total winter ichthyoplankton biomass considered to be common
salmon fish prey fluctuated from 13.9% in 2006 to 95.0% in 2000. The relationship between
biomass of fish larvae in winter and subsequent coho salmon survival was highly significant (r² =
50.0, p = 0.004). When the 2 outlier years of 1998 (El Niño) and 1999 (La Niña) were removed, this
relationship was also highly significant for spring Chinook (r² = 70.7, p = 0.0002) and significant
for fall Chinook salmon (r² = 34.0, p = 0.03) returns. Winter larval fish composition showed a high
degree of overlap with juvenile salmon diets during May, but less overlap in June. Larval fishes
appeared to be an early and cost-effective indicator of ocean ecosystem conditions and future
juvenile salmon survival.
Genre Article
Topic Ichthyoplankton
Identifier Daly, E., Auth, T., Brodeur, R., & Peterson, W. (2013). Winter ichthyoplankton biomass as a predictor of early summer prey fields and survival of juvenile salmon in the northern california current. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 484, 203-217. doi:10.3354/meps10320

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