NMFS Alaska Coded Wire Tag Responsibilities
Since the late 1960s, coded-wire tags (CWTs) have been a primary means
for marking Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.) for stock assessment, harvest
management, and enhancement evaluations. Because anadromous salmonid stocks
range the length of the Pacific coast from California to Alaska in their
migrations from natal stream to the ocean and back to spawn, they typically
traverse many different fisheries in many different political jurisdictions.
Recovery of salmon tagged as juveniles with CWTs has been one of the principal
procedures used by fisheries agencies to assess stock abundance, manage
fisheries, and protect stocks which are depressed, threatened, or endangered.
Since 1968, 82 Federal, State, Native American, and private agencies in
Alaska, Washington, Oregon, Idaho, California, and British Columbia have
released over 600 million salmon with CWTs. Currently, over 45 million
young salmon are marked with CWTs and are released to migrate into the
Pacific Ocean each year.
Information on the release, sampling, and recovery of all CWT salmonids
throughout the Pacific region is available in an online coastwide database,
the Regional Mark Information System (RMIS). This database is maintained
by the Regional Mark Processing Center (RMPC) of the Pacific States Marine
Fisheries Commission (PSMFC) to facilitate exchange of CWT data between
managers, release agencies, sampling/recovery agencies, and other data
users.
The Marine Salmon Interactions (MSI) program at ABL has been responsible
for many years in maintaining several different components of this coastwide
CWT database, including:
- Releases of CWT salmonids from research programs conducted at Federal
facilities in Alaska such as Little Port Walter (LPW) and Auke Creek.
- Recovery of CWT salmonids from Federal research programs in Alaska such
as the Southeast Coastal Monitoring Program and the Ocean Carrying Capacity
Program, as well as adults returning from experiments at LPW and Auke Creek.
- Recovery and catch samples of CWT salmonids caught incidentally in three
commercial high-seas groundfish fisheries:
- Pacific whiting (hake) fishery off Washington, Oregon, and
California
- Gulf of Alaska (GOA) groundfish fishery
- Bering Sea-Aleutian Islands (BSAI) groundfish fishery
Salmon bycatch in the three groundfish fisheries are sampled by onboard
observers that have been managed, through calendar year 2001, by the AFSC.
Beginning in 2002, placement of observers in the Pacific whiting fishery,
the responsibility for managing salmon bycatch sampling, and maintaining
and reporting CWT databases to PSMFC will be transferred to the Northwest
Fisheries Science Center and the NMFS Northwest Region. Responsibilities
for observers in the GOA and BSAI groundfish fisheries will remain at the AFSC. Since 1980, over 4,400 CWT salmonids have been recovered on the
high seas from releases by 48 agencies.
By Adrian Celewycz.
Little Port Walter Field Station Headquarters Building Exterior Renovation
The headquarters building at LPW field station is getting a complete facelift.
The LPW field station is the oldest biological research laboratory in
Alaska. Built in 1940 with a $5,000 congressional appropriation, the headquarters
building was initially constructed by the Civilian Conservation Corps using
old bricks from a nearby abandoned cannery. The present renovation is
being done by the Paug Vik Construction Company and managed as a Capital
Improvement Project by WASC engineer Bud Sawisch. The project calls for
removal of the entire brick facade along with all the windows, doors, and
roof, installation of insulation, and refinishing of the exterior. Work
has progressed on schedule, even though 7 feet of snow fell in one 3-day
period in December. All the old brick has been removed and the building
has been insulated and house wrapped. The expected completion date is
1 March and a rededication ceremony will probably occur in June.
By Frank Thrower.
SCUBA Diving Study of Sponges
Previous studies by the ABL on the effects of mobile fishing gear on the
benthos of the continental shelf in the eastern Gulf of Alaska (GOA) have
shown that several species of large erect sponge are important components
of structural habitat on the seafloor and are particularly susceptible
to removal or damage by commercial trawling activity. A follow-up study
conducted by ABL staff 1 year after trawling indicated no sign of recovery
from trawl damage. In contrast, experimental trawling carried out in warm,
shallow water on the southeastern continental shelf of the coterminous
United States has shown that sponge communities are quick to recover to
pretrawl abundances and that individual damaged sponges undergo rapid regeneration.
Because the ability of benthic epifauna to recover from trawl damage may
be a consideration in future fishery management plans, ABL biologists initiated
a study of several species of sponge in 2001. A small community of sponges
was discovered at scuba-diving depths in Seymour Canal, Admiralty Island,
Southeast Alaska. Several of the species resembled those found in deeper
waters on the continental shelf in the GOA and presented the opportunity
to conduct manipulative experiments. A second nearshore shallow-water
sponge community was later discovered with a remotely operated vehicle (ROV)
in the vicinity of Benjamin Island, Lynn Canal, Southeast Alaska.
The purpose of the study is to determine basic life history parameters
(particularly growth and regeneration) of shallow cold-water sponges.
During April 2001, ABL biologists visited Seymour Canal site during a cruise
of the NOAA ship John N. Cobb to 1) chart the distribution of the sponge
community; 2) tag individual sponges; 3) take manual measurements of individual
sponges; 4) videotape individual sponges for growth measurements; and 5)
collect specimens for species identifications through spicule analysis.
On 11-12 December 2001, the second community of sponges near Benjamin
Island was investigated using the chartered fishing vessel Solstice and
objectives 1-5 (above) were carried out again. ABL biologists located
the sponge community which consisted of an isolated reef approximately
30 m by 30 m in areal extent and approximately 95-130 feet in depth. Two
species of sponge, yet to be identified, were abundant and covered 100%
of the reef. Thirty specimens were tagged, and two circular cores 2.24
cm in diameter were removed from each specimen. The site will be revisited
at regular intervals to determine tissue regeneration rates of the sponges
and to collect additional information regarding large-scale distribution
of the sponges, habitat associations, and recruitment.
By Linc Freese.
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quarterly Oct-Dec 2001 sidebar
AFSC Quarterly
Research Reports
Oct-Dec 2001
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