A biological risk assessment for an Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) invasion in Alaskan waters

Abstract We present an event-tree biological risk assessment for a non-native Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) invasion into Alaskan waters. Atlantic salmon farming is prohibited in Alaska, USA, but large numbers of them are reared in ocean net-pens in Washinton (WA) USA, and British Columbia (BC), Can...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: John J Piccolo, Ewa H Orlikowska
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.1083.1718
http://www.aquaticinvasions.net/2012/AI_2012_2_Piccolo_Orlikowska.pdf
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Summary:Abstract We present an event-tree biological risk assessment for a non-native Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) invasion into Alaskan waters. Atlantic salmon farming is prohibited in Alaska, USA, but large numbers of them are reared in ocean net-pens in Washinton (WA) USA, and British Columbia (BC), Canada. Large numbers of Atlantic salmon escape each year, and they have been recovered in both saltwater and freshwater in WA, BC, and Alaska. There is limited evidence of successful spawning and rearing in BC, but none from Alaska. No stream-reared smolts are known to have returned successfully from ocean migrations, but survey efforts for escaped adults and reared juveniles in streams have been very limited in time and space. Given recurring, large-scale escape events, propagule pressure could be great enough in any given year for a successful invasion. To date, such large numbers of adults have not been recorded ascending Alaskan streams, but again, monitoring is very limited. Atlantic salmon could most likely successfully spawn and rear in Alaskan streams, so successful ocean migration appears to be the factor most likely to limit their success. Successful invasion of BC waters, where propagule pressure is greater, followed by a subsequent invasion of a pre-adapted stock by straying to Alaskan waters, may pose the greatest risk. The lack of adequate surveys, under-reporting of escapes and recoveries, and inherent ecosystem variation, make it impossible to assign meaningful probabilities to the risk of an invasion of Alaskan waters. We conclude that the short-term risk of invasion generally appears low, but that it might increase over time. We also note that invasion is only part of the ecological risk of Atlantic salmon farming in Pacific waters. Disease, parasites, and pollution may also pose risks to local ecosystems -we do not assess these risks here.