Assessment: Chinook, Chum, and Whitefish Ecology in the Yukon River Basin

The Yukon River Inter-Tribal Watershed Council represents the indigenous people of the Yukon River. Currently, the Watershed Council is developing a Yukon River Watershed Management Plan. The heart of the plan will be a set of measurable water quality standards designed to protect the quality and fl...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Morawetz, Jennie
Other Authors: Longest, Ryke
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10161/6501
id ftdukeunivdsp:oai:localhost:10161/6501
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdukeunivdsp:oai:localhost:10161/6501 2023-11-12T04:17:11+01:00 Assessment: Chinook, Chum, and Whitefish Ecology in the Yukon River Basin Morawetz, Jennie Longest, Ryke 2013-04-15 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10161/6501 en_US eng https://hdl.handle.net/10161/6501 Yukon River chinook chum whitefish Master's project 2013 ftdukeunivdsp 2023-10-17T09:40:18Z The Yukon River Inter-Tribal Watershed Council represents the indigenous people of the Yukon River. Currently, the Watershed Council is developing a Yukon River Watershed Management Plan. The heart of the plan will be a set of measurable water quality standards designed to protect the quality and flow of the Yukon River for the benefit of the river’s people and its fish species, on which the people rely for food and for maintenance of their traditional way of life. This summer, delegates from the Tribes and First Nations will decide whether to approve the proposed plan and recommend to the individual governments a proposed model ordinance incorporating by reference the water quality standards in the plan. If they adopt the plan, the Tribes and First Nations will then need to work together to compare existing conditions against the water quality standards, among other things. For a comparison of existing conditions and the water quality standards to be meaningful, it must be done in light of information on how people and how fish use the river. The Watershed Council has focused most of its energies so far on water quality as it relates to human and community health. Given this historical focus, the Watershed Council has relatively little technical information regarding fish ecology in the Yukon basin. This Master’s Project is designed to be the first step in building that institutional knowledge. It begins with a brief overview of the Yukon basin, of the importance of clean water, and of existing water quality. It then provides a broad summary of existing ecological information on three of the Yukon’s key subsistence fish species—chinook salmon, chum salmon, and whitefish—based on a thorough literature review. It concludes by recommending that the Watershed Council prioritize four subbasins for more localized planning efforts: the Tanana River subbasin; the Koyukuk River or Lower Yukon subbasin; the Porcupine River or Chandalar River subbasin; and the Stewart River subbasin. By being at the vanguard of the ... Master Thesis First Nations Key Subsistence Fish Species Porcupine River Yukon Basin Yukon river Yukon Duke University Libraries: DukeSpace Yukon Yukon Basin ENVELOPE(-135.000,-135.000,64.282,64.282)
institution Open Polar
collection Duke University Libraries: DukeSpace
op_collection_id ftdukeunivdsp
language English
topic Yukon River
chinook
chum
whitefish
spellingShingle Yukon River
chinook
chum
whitefish
Morawetz, Jennie
Assessment: Chinook, Chum, and Whitefish Ecology in the Yukon River Basin
topic_facet Yukon River
chinook
chum
whitefish
description The Yukon River Inter-Tribal Watershed Council represents the indigenous people of the Yukon River. Currently, the Watershed Council is developing a Yukon River Watershed Management Plan. The heart of the plan will be a set of measurable water quality standards designed to protect the quality and flow of the Yukon River for the benefit of the river’s people and its fish species, on which the people rely for food and for maintenance of their traditional way of life. This summer, delegates from the Tribes and First Nations will decide whether to approve the proposed plan and recommend to the individual governments a proposed model ordinance incorporating by reference the water quality standards in the plan. If they adopt the plan, the Tribes and First Nations will then need to work together to compare existing conditions against the water quality standards, among other things. For a comparison of existing conditions and the water quality standards to be meaningful, it must be done in light of information on how people and how fish use the river. The Watershed Council has focused most of its energies so far on water quality as it relates to human and community health. Given this historical focus, the Watershed Council has relatively little technical information regarding fish ecology in the Yukon basin. This Master’s Project is designed to be the first step in building that institutional knowledge. It begins with a brief overview of the Yukon basin, of the importance of clean water, and of existing water quality. It then provides a broad summary of existing ecological information on three of the Yukon’s key subsistence fish species—chinook salmon, chum salmon, and whitefish—based on a thorough literature review. It concludes by recommending that the Watershed Council prioritize four subbasins for more localized planning efforts: the Tanana River subbasin; the Koyukuk River or Lower Yukon subbasin; the Porcupine River or Chandalar River subbasin; and the Stewart River subbasin. By being at the vanguard of the ...
author2 Longest, Ryke
format Master Thesis
author Morawetz, Jennie
author_facet Morawetz, Jennie
author_sort Morawetz, Jennie
title Assessment: Chinook, Chum, and Whitefish Ecology in the Yukon River Basin
title_short Assessment: Chinook, Chum, and Whitefish Ecology in the Yukon River Basin
title_full Assessment: Chinook, Chum, and Whitefish Ecology in the Yukon River Basin
title_fullStr Assessment: Chinook, Chum, and Whitefish Ecology in the Yukon River Basin
title_full_unstemmed Assessment: Chinook, Chum, and Whitefish Ecology in the Yukon River Basin
title_sort assessment: chinook, chum, and whitefish ecology in the yukon river basin
publishDate 2013
url https://hdl.handle.net/10161/6501
long_lat ENVELOPE(-135.000,-135.000,64.282,64.282)
geographic Yukon
Yukon Basin
geographic_facet Yukon
Yukon Basin
genre First Nations
Key Subsistence Fish Species
Porcupine River
Yukon Basin
Yukon river
Yukon
genre_facet First Nations
Key Subsistence Fish Species
Porcupine River
Yukon Basin
Yukon river
Yukon
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/10161/6501
_version_ 1782334148763975680