Ocean Carrying Capacity Program
Distribution, Migration, and Relative Abundance of Juvenile Salmon in the Eastern Bering Sea
Scientists from the ABL Ocean Carrying Capacity (OCC) program conducted research
cruises to survey juvenile Pacific salmon in the eastern Bering Sea during 2000–03. The research is
part of the Bering-Aleutian Salmon International Survey (BASIS), a Bering Sea ecosystem study that
includes member nations (Canada, Russian, Japan, and United States) of the North Pacific Anadromous
Fish Commission (NPAFC). The BASIS study was developed to clarify the mechanisms of biological
response by salmon to the conditions caused by climate change.
The goal of OCC’s BASIS research is to understand mechanisms underlying the effects of environment
on the distribution, migration, and growth of juvenile salmon along the eastern Bering Sea shelf.
Specific objectives of the OCC research cruises are to determine migration and distribution of juvenile
salmon stocks, measure early marine growth, and determine relative abundance.
Results indicate that 1) juvenile salmon are widely distributed across the eastern Bering Sea
shelf, 2) species-specific distributional patterns of juvenile salmon can exist, 3) distributional patterns
are likely related to principal prey sources (e.g., age-0 pollock for juvenile sockeye (O. nerka) and chum
salmon, larval and juvenile sand lance for juvenile chinook), and 4) oceanographic characteristics can
influence distribution and migration pathways (e.g., juvenile salmon appear to avoid areas of intense coccolithophore
blooms). Size and relative abundance of juvenile sockeye and chum salmon was greatest during 2002 and 2003.
Age-1.0 juvenile sockeye salmon tended to comprise the largest component of catch during fall surveys.
By Edward Farley
Eastern Bering Sea (BASIS) Coastal Research
Scientists from OCC program conducted a research cruise in the eastern Bering Sea during
August–October 2004 as part of BASIS. The cruise was to study early marine distribution, migration,
and growth of juvenile Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.) and associated marine species on the
eastern Bering Sea shelf.
A total of 8,970 salmon were captured, including juvenile pink (O. gorbuscha;
20.9%), chum (O. keta; 19.4%), sockeye (O. nerka; 42.6%), coho (O. kisutch; 3.9%), and
chinook (O. tshawytscha; 5.3%) salmon. Less than 9% of the catch consisted of immature and mature
chum, sockeye, and chinook salmon.
A total of 2,837,503 other marine fish species were captured
during the survey, including age-0 walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma; 91.6%) and Pacific herring
(Clupea pallasi; 6.9%).
The catch also included less than 1% each for crested sculpin (Blepsias bilobus),
sturgeon poacher (Podothecus acipenserinus), Bering wolffish (Anarhichas orientalis), Pacific sandfish
(Trichodon trichodon), capelin (Mallotus villosus), Pacific cod (Gadus macrocephalus), prowfish
(Zaprora silenus), Pacific sand lance (Ammodytes hexapterus), northern rock sole
(Lepidopsetta peracuata), lamprey (Petromyzontidae), sablefish (Anoplopoma fimbria),
Atka mackerel (Pleurogrammus monopterygius), starry flounder (Platichthys stellatus),
rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax), rock greenling (Hexagrammos lagocephalus), salmon shark
(Lamna ditropis), saffron cod (Eleginus gracilis), ninespine stickleback (Pungitus pungitus),
yellowfin sole (Limanda aspera), rockfish (Sebastes spp), plain sculpin (Myoxocephalus jaok),
Bering poacher (Occella dodecaedron), antlered sculpin (Enophrys diceraus), Greenland halibut
(Reinhardtius hippoglossoides), snake prickleback (Lumpenus sagitta), and ribbed sculpin
(Triglops pingeli).
By Ed Farley
GLOBEC Field Survey
A Global Ocean Ecosystem Dynamics (GLOBEC) cruise was conducted in October–November 2004
to investigate the relationships between physical and biological oceanographic processes
that affect the distribution and biology of juvenile Pacific salmon in the Gulf of Alaska.
Measurements focused on the spatial pattern of salmon distribution, oceanographic properties, and
the distribution of zooplankton along selected transects. The survey included six transects beginning
with the Cape Kumlik transect, located southeast of Kodiak Island and ending with the Cape Douglas
transect, located northwest of Afognak Island. Transects were perpendicular to shore and extended
from nearshore across the continental shelf to oceanic waters beyond the 200-m shelf break.
The survey was conducted aboard the commercial fishing vessel Great Pacific. Fish samples were
collected using a 198-m long midwater rope trawl with hexagonal mesh wings and body. Salmon and
other fishes were sorted by species and counted. Standard biological measurements including fork
length, body weight, and sex were made. Scale samples from the preferred area (to document age and
growth) were taken from juvenile and immature salmon, and a subset of juvenile salmon was frozen
whole for laboratory analyses of food habits, genetic origin, and the reading of hatchery thermal marks
on otoliths.
Oceanographic measurements were made at trawl stations immediately prior to each trawl haul
and included temperature, salinity, oxygen concentration, photosynthetically available radiation
(PAR), chlorophyll fluorescence, and optical transmittance. Plankton samples were collected using a
Bongo net frame fitted with 505-µm and 330-µm mesh nets that were towed obliquely relative to the surface.
A thermosalinograph, nutrient sampler, and fluorometer provided continuous measurements of near-surface
temperature, salinity, nutrients, and fluorescence. Satellite-tracked drifting buoys were deployed at
designated trawl stations to measure the strength and direction of the current along the continental shelf.
During the survey, 31 trawl stations were completed, and a total of 3,549 salmon were captured.
Juvenile salmon were distributed along the shelf; salmon species represented in the catch were pink
(63.5%), chum (28.2%), sockeye (6.9%), coho (1.4%), and chinook (<1%) salmon. Immature salmon
were located on the shelf and offshore. Species of immature salmon represented in the catch were
chum (<1%) and chinook (<1%) salmon. No mature salmon were caught.
By Jamal Moss
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AFSC Quarterly Research Reports Oct-Dec 2004
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