Declining Marine Survival of Steelhead Trout Linked to Climate and Ecosystem Change

Species with complex life cycles, such as anadromous fish that perform spawning migrations between freshwater and the ocean, may be particularly sensitive to global change because freshwater and marine habitats experience distinct shifts in climate and ecosystem dynamics. Abundances of wild steelhea...

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Main Author: Losee, James
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: WILEY 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/36959/
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author Losee, James
author_facet Losee, James
author_sort Losee, James
collection Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive
description Species with complex life cycles, such as anadromous fish that perform spawning migrations between freshwater and the ocean, may be particularly sensitive to global change because freshwater and marine habitats experience distinct shifts in climate and ecosystem dynamics. Abundances of wild steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) have declined across most of their range over the past 40-50 years. We examined whether declines in steelhead survival can be linked to changing climate conditions and species interactions. A novel hierarchical integrated population model that accounts for the species' complex life history was fitted to data from multiple wild steelhead populations on the Washington coast, U.S.A. The model estimates recruitment residuals and kelt survival rates as time-varying processes, which reflect annual variation in survival before and after first maturation. We found that survival rates of immature steelhead (recruits) and adult steelhead (kelts) have declined over time and that survival trends across populations were strongly associated with climate and ecosystem change, specifically summer sea surface temperature and pink salmon abundance in the North Pacific Ocean, the NPGO index and river flows. Including these drivers in the model reduced unexplained annual variation in shared recruitment and kelt survival anomalies and largely accounted for their negative long-term trends. Our findings provide evidence that rising temperatures and increased interspecific competition at sea have contributed to declines in steelhead survival over the last five decades. Considering projected warming and high pink salmon abundances in the ocean, steelhead will likely continue to experience low marine survival rates.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Pink salmon
genre_facet Pink salmon
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
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institution Open Polar
language English
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op_relation https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/36959/1/ohlberger-j-et-al-20250417.pdf
Losee, James (2025). Declining Marine Survival of Steelhead Trout Linked to Climate and Ecosystem Change. Fish and Fisheries. 26 :3 , 331-345 [Research article]
publishDate 2025
publisher WILEY
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spelling ftslunivuppsala:oai:pub.epsilon.slu.se:36959 2025-05-18T14:06:26+00:00 Declining Marine Survival of Steelhead Trout Linked to Climate and Ecosystem Change Losee, James 2025 application/pdf https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/36959/ en eng eng WILEY https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/36959/1/ohlberger-j-et-al-20250417.pdf Losee, James (2025). Declining Marine Survival of Steelhead Trout Linked to Climate and Ecosystem Change. Fish and Fisheries. 26 :3 , 331-345 [Research article] Fish and Aquacultural Science Environmental Sciences (social aspects to be 507) Research article NonPeerReviewed 2025 ftslunivuppsala 2025-04-23T14:13:55Z Species with complex life cycles, such as anadromous fish that perform spawning migrations between freshwater and the ocean, may be particularly sensitive to global change because freshwater and marine habitats experience distinct shifts in climate and ecosystem dynamics. Abundances of wild steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) have declined across most of their range over the past 40-50 years. We examined whether declines in steelhead survival can be linked to changing climate conditions and species interactions. A novel hierarchical integrated population model that accounts for the species' complex life history was fitted to data from multiple wild steelhead populations on the Washington coast, U.S.A. The model estimates recruitment residuals and kelt survival rates as time-varying processes, which reflect annual variation in survival before and after first maturation. We found that survival rates of immature steelhead (recruits) and adult steelhead (kelts) have declined over time and that survival trends across populations were strongly associated with climate and ecosystem change, specifically summer sea surface temperature and pink salmon abundance in the North Pacific Ocean, the NPGO index and river flows. Including these drivers in the model reduced unexplained annual variation in shared recruitment and kelt survival anomalies and largely accounted for their negative long-term trends. Our findings provide evidence that rising temperatures and increased interspecific competition at sea have contributed to declines in steelhead survival over the last five decades. Considering projected warming and high pink salmon abundances in the ocean, steelhead will likely continue to experience low marine survival rates. Article in Journal/Newspaper Pink salmon Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive Pacific
spellingShingle Fish and Aquacultural Science
Environmental Sciences (social aspects to be 507)
Losee, James
Declining Marine Survival of Steelhead Trout Linked to Climate and Ecosystem Change
title Declining Marine Survival of Steelhead Trout Linked to Climate and Ecosystem Change
title_full Declining Marine Survival of Steelhead Trout Linked to Climate and Ecosystem Change
title_fullStr Declining Marine Survival of Steelhead Trout Linked to Climate and Ecosystem Change
title_full_unstemmed Declining Marine Survival of Steelhead Trout Linked to Climate and Ecosystem Change
title_short Declining Marine Survival of Steelhead Trout Linked to Climate and Ecosystem Change
title_sort declining marine survival of steelhead trout linked to climate and ecosystem change
topic Fish and Aquacultural Science
Environmental Sciences (social aspects to be 507)
topic_facet Fish and Aquacultural Science
Environmental Sciences (social aspects to be 507)
url https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/36959/