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Quantifying Salmon-Derived Nutrient Loads from the Mortality of Hatchery-Origin Juvenile Chinook Salmon in the Snake River Basin Public Deposited

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https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/vm40xs03r

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Abstract
  • Hatchery supplementation of anadromous salmon is extensive across the Pacific Northwest region with millions of juvenile salmon stocked annually. The influence of hatchery-origin fish as prey items in recipient ecosystems has been explored, but influences of these fish on broader stream nutrient dynamics has not been well-studied. Salmon-derived nutrients (SDN) associated with the mortality of adult anadromous salmon provide key subsidies to freshwater habitats. While a number of studies have estimated current and historic SDN loading from returning wild salmon, SDN contributions from the mortality of hatchery-origin juveniles (many of which die in the stream prior to emigration) remains largely unknown. We conducted a mass balance analysis of SDN input and export via hatchery activities (stocking and broodstock collection) in the Snake River watershed. Using Chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha as a model species, we accounted for yearly SDN input (via hatchery-origin juvenile fish mortality) and export (via broodstock collections and presmolt growth) over 6 years (2002–2007) in the portion of the Snake River upstream from Lower Granite Dam accessible to anadromous fish. In the year with highest smolt mortality (2003), hatchery-origin smolt mortality provided a net input of SDN equivalent to approximately 8,100 returning adults. In the year with lowest smolt mortality (2004), hatchery activities collectively yielded a net loss of nutrients. Although the mass of SDN from hatchery-origin smolts may be presented in adult equivalencies, functional influences of SDN from hatchery smolt mortality are likely to differ. Salmon-derived nutrients from hatcheries enter food webs through largely piscivorous pathways whereas SDN from adult carcasses enter food webs through multiple pathways at multiple trophic levels. The SDN from hatchery-origin smolts probably influence different components of the food web more than do adult carcasses and have the potential to more directly affect predator populations.
  • This is the publisher’s final pdf. The article is copyrighted by the American Fisheries Society and published by Taylor & Francis. It can be found at: http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/utaf20/current
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Citation
  • Dana R. Warren & Michelle M. McClure (2012): Quantifying Salmon-Derived Nutrient Loads from the Mortality of Hatchery-Origin Juvenile Chinook Salmon in the Snake River Basin, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society, 141:5, 1287-1294
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Journal Volume
  • 141
Journal Issue/Number
  • 5
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  • Funding was provided by the National Research Council’s Post-Doctoral Fellowship Program and The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
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