Alaska Sustainable Salmon Fund Project #52002: Climate warming effects on Chinook Salmon foraging conditions and growth

The Chena River hosts one of the largest populations of Chinook Salmon in the Alaska portion of the Yukon River drainage, which has recently experienced poor Chinook returns throughout. Past work suggests that these fish do poorly when they grow slowly due to cold, high-flow conditions during their...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Neuswanger, Jason
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/7294248
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.1vhhmgqvv
Description
Summary:The Chena River hosts one of the largest populations of Chinook Salmon in the Alaska portion of the Yukon River drainage, which has recently experienced poor Chinook returns throughout. Past work suggests that these fish do poorly when they grow slowly due to cold, high-flow conditions during their first summer in the river as juveniles, and the population does well when juveniles experience warm, low-flow years and grow larger. Because high flow drives low water temperatures and vice versa, it was previously unclear to what extent each factor—flow and temperature—affects the fish population. We collected data to run foraging and bioenergetics models that simulate how flow and temperature affect growth. We invented two sampling devices, a suction pump to sample drifting prey and a computer vision system to measure the inedible debris that occupy most of a fish's feeding effort. We combined our data with USGS and NOAA records to predict temperature, turbidity, prey, and debris on a daily basis throughout our study years (2019-2020) and others. This dataset contains the data we collected and compiled from other sources on fish growth, temperature, invertebrate drift, and drifting debris. The spreadsheets in "Completed Field Datasheets" include all environmental data associated with our collections (e.g. turbidity, windspeed) in a consistent format. The date and site name listed on those sheets corresponds to a code "YYYY-MM-DD SiteName" that was used to reference data collected there in subsequent files. Temperatures throughout these files are given in degrees C. Drift concentrations and energy contents are given in #/m3 and J/m3, respectively. Masses are given in grams and fish lengths in mm. The "Site Predictions" folder contains observed, predicted, and "best" temperature columns for each of our study site. The "observed" column usually only includes 1-2 years of data. The "best" column uses the observed data when available and the predicted data otherwise.Funding provided by: Alaska Sustainable Salmon ...