Processes affecting the productivity of capelin and pollock in the Gulf of Alaska Project #F0524

The over-arching goal of this project was to investigate the processes affecting the productivity of capelin and walleye pollock, important forage fishes in the Gulf of Alaska (GOA). The first objective was to investigate the key physical processes by comparing the distribution of fish with oceanogr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Elizabeth A. Logerwell, Janet Duffy-anderson, Matthew Wilson, Patricia Livingston, Key Words
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.169.7705
http://doc.nprb.org/web/05_prjs/524_Final%20report%20REVISED%2010-10-08.pdf
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Summary:The over-arching goal of this project was to investigate the processes affecting the productivity of capelin and walleye pollock, important forage fishes in the Gulf of Alaska (GOA). The first objective was to investigate the key physical processes by comparing the distribution of fish with oceanographic properties and the distribution of prey. The second objective was to investigate the potential for interspecific competition by comparing measures of foraging success between capelin and juvenile pollock. The field study to address these objectives was conducted in Barnabus Trough off Kodiak Island during September 2005 on the NOAA Vessel Miller Freeman. The distribution of fish was assessed with fisheries acoustics and mid-water trawls. Fish were collected from trawls for stomach contents. Physical and biological data were collected with conductivity-temperature-depth (CTD) probes and zooplankton tows. Our results support the linkage between oceanography, prey, fish diet and fish distribution. We found that age-0 pollock were distributed in cool, high-salinity waters offshore of a mid-trough front, coincident with the distribution of the bulk of their preferred prey, euphausiids. In contrast to pollock, we found that capelin were distributed throughout the trough, as was the distribution of their dominant prey, copepods. Although capelin and pollock had different diets in 2005, in a previous year’s survey (2004) they were both found inshore of the mid-trough front foraging on euphausiids, suggesting the potential for