Magnitude and Trends in Abundance of Hatchery and Wild Pink Salmon, Chum Salmon, and Sockeye Salmon in the North Pacific Ocean

Abstract Abundance estimates of wild and hatchery Pacific salmon Oncorhynchus spp. are important for evaluation of stock status and density‐dependent interactions at sea. We assembled available salmon catch and spawning abundance data for both Asia and North America and reconstructed total abundance...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Marine and Coastal Fisheries
Main Authors: Ruggerone, Gregory T., Peterman, Randall M., Dorner, Brigitte, Myers, Katherine W.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2010
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1577/c09-054.1
https://afspubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1577/C09-054.1
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Summary:Abstract Abundance estimates of wild and hatchery Pacific salmon Oncorhynchus spp. are important for evaluation of stock status and density‐dependent interactions at sea. We assembled available salmon catch and spawning abundance data for both Asia and North America and reconstructed total abundances of pink salmon O. gorbuscha , chum salmon O. keta , and sockeye salmon O. nerka during 1952–2005. Abundance trends were evaluated with respect to species, regional stock groups, and climatic regimes. Wild adult pink salmon were the most numerous salmon species (average = 268 × 10 6 fish/year, or 70% of the total abundance of the three species), followed by sockeye salmon (63 × 10 6 fish/year, or 17%) and chum salmon (48 × 10 6 fish/year, or 13%). After the 1976–1977 ocean regime shift, abundances of wild pink salmon and sockeye salmon increased by more than 65% on average, whereas abundance of wild chum salmon was lower in recent decades. Although wild salmon abundances in most regions of North America increased in the late 1970s, abundances in Asia typically did not increase until the 1990s. Annual releases of juvenile salmon from hatcheries increased rapidly during the 1970s and 1980s and reached approximately 4.5 × 10 9 juveniles/year during the 1990s and early 2000s. During 1990–2005, annual production of hatchery‐origin adult salmon averaged 78 × 10 6 chum salmon, 54 × 10 6 pink salmon, and 3.2 × 10 6 sockeye salmon, or approximately 62, 13, and 4%, respectively, of the combined total wild and hatchery salmon abundance. The combined abundance of adult wild and hatchery salmon during 1990–2005 averaged 634 × 10 6 salmon/year (498 × 10 6 wild salmon/year), or approximately twice as many as during 1952–1975. The large and increasing abundances of hatchery salmon have important management implications in terms of density‐dependent processes and conservation of wild salmon populations; management agencies should improve estimates of hatchery salmon abundance in harvests and on the spawning grounds.