Salmon brood tables, Westward Region, Alaska

Brood tables, also called run reconstructions, utilize annual estimates of the total run (commercial catch plus escapement), and samples of ages, to estimate the number of recruits per age class. These data are useful for salmon biologists to understand salmon productivity and salmon life histories....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Alaska Department of Fish and Game
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Knowledge Network for Biocomplexity 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:368fc8e9-0fcd-4af7-8977-5237345d5eee
Description
Summary:Brood tables, also called run reconstructions, utilize annual estimates of the total run (commercial catch plus escapement), and samples of ages, to estimate the number of recruits per age class. These data are useful for salmon biologists to understand salmon productivity and salmon life histories. These data can come in a number of different formats, but generally follow the pattern of: rows for each brood year, and columns for the estimated number of fish in each age class. This dataset consists of reformated brood tables from the Westward Region of Alaska. These datasets were gathered as part of the State of Alaskan Salmon and People project (https://alaskasalmonandpeople.org/). Age classes are given in European Notation, where the first number is the number of winters spent in freshwater before going to sea (1 winter in freshwater = age-1.X), and the second number is the number of winters spent at sea (3 winters at sea = age-X.3). For chinook salmon, only total age (age X) is given.