Reconstructing Juvenile Chinook Salmon Life History in the Salmon River Estuary, Oregon, Using Otolith Microchemistry and Microstructure

被引:43
|
作者
Volk, Eric C. [1 ]
Bottom, Daniel L. [2 ]
Jones, Kim K. [3 ]
Simenstad, Charles A. [4 ]
机构
[1] Alaska Dept Fish & Game, Commercial Fisheries Div, Anchorage, AK 99518 USA
[2] Natl Ocean & Atmospher Adm Fisheries, NW Fisheries Sci Ctr, Newport, OR 97365 USA
[3] Oregon Dept Fish & Wildlife, Corvallis, OR 97333 USA
[4] Univ Washington, Sch Aquat & Fishery Sci, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
关键词
ONCORHYNCHUS-TSHAWYTSCHA; FRASER-RIVER; STRONTIUM; RESIDENCY; TACTICS;
D O I
10.1577/T08-163.1
中图分类号
S9 [水产、渔业];
学科分类号
0908 ;
摘要
We quantified the juvenile rearing and migratory patterns of individuals from a population of fall-spawning Chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha in Oregon's Salmon River estuary using otolith microchemistry and microstructure. The study confirmed the daily periodicity of otolith growth increments in a natural fish population under field conditions and validated fundamental assumptions about increased otolith strontium : calcium values during entry into saline waters. The otolith results indicated that more than 75% of the subyearling Chinook salmon captured near the mouth of the Salmon River had entered the estuary during the summer and that two-thirds of these fish had spent more than a month in the estuary before capture. Unlike in other Oregon coastal estuaries, in which the fingerling-migrant portion of their life histories is dominant, approximately two-thirds of Salmon River Chinook salmon in upper-estuary marshes were early fry (<50-mm) migrants. A much smaller proportion at the river mouth suggests that many fry migrants did not survive to the lower estuary or passed undetected during ocean emigration. Nonetheless, the otolith results reveal a substantially greater contribution of estuarine-rearing fry to the out-migrant population at the Salmon River than has been reported in other Oregon coastal basins. A small component of fall-migrating fish with long freshwater residence times also occurred at the river mouth. Most of these individuals had migrated quickly through the estuary. Rather than revealing a series of discrete "types'' defined by the predominant rearing patterns in the population, the individual otolith results depict a continuum of freshwater and estuarine life histories that is consistent with reports of considerable phenotypic plasticity in Chinook salmon. Otolith analysis offers the potential to quantify the relative contributions of different juvenile rearing patterns to adult returns.
引用
收藏
页码:535 / 549
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Juvenile Salmon Usage of the Skeena River Estuary
    Carr-Harris, Charmaine
    Gottesfeld, Allen S.
    Moore, Jonathan W.
    [J]. PLOS ONE, 2015, 10 (03):
  • [22] Juvenile Chinook salmon, Oncorhynchus tshawytscha, use of the Elwha river estuary prior to dam removal
    Thomas P. Quinn
    J. Anne Shaffer
    Justin Brown
    Nicole Harris
    Chris Byrnes
    Patrick Crain
    [J]. Environmental Biology of Fishes, 2014, 97 : 731 - 740
  • [23] Juvenile Chinook salmon, Oncorhynchus tshawytscha, use of the Elwha river estuary prior to dam removal
    Quinn, Thomas P.
    Shaffer, J. Anne
    Brown, Justin
    Harris, Nicole
    Byrnes, Chris
    Crain, Patrick
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL BIOLOGY OF FISHES, 2014, 97 (06) : 731 - 740
  • [24] Juvenile life history of wild fall chinook salmon in the snake and clearwater rivers
    Connor, WP
    Burge, HL
    Waitt, R
    Bjornn, TC
    [J]. NORTH AMERICAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES MANAGEMENT, 2002, 22 (03) : 703 - 712
  • [25] Potential of Otolith Microchemistry to Distinguish Nursery Areas of Salmon within River Simojoki
    Finnas, Viktor
    Jokikokko, Erkki
    Lill, Jan-Olof
    Lahaye, Yann
    Hagerstrand, Henry
    Lindstrom, Kai
    [J]. FISHES, 2023, 8 (06)
  • [26] TEMPORAL USE OF AN OREGON ESTUARY BY HATCHERY AND WILD JUVENILE SALMON
    MYERS, KW
    HORTON, HF
    [J]. ESTUARIES, 1981, 4 (03): : 286 - 286
  • [27] Juvenile river residence and performance of Snake River fall Chinook salmon
    Chittaro, Paul M.
    Hegg, Jens C.
    Kennedy, Brian P.
    Weitkamp, Laurie A.
    Johnson, Lyndal L.
    Bucher, Cynthia
    Zabel, Richard W.
    [J]. ECOLOGY OF FRESHWATER FISH, 2019, 28 (03) : 396 - 410
  • [28] Ecology of Winter Concealment Behavior of Juvenile Spring Chinook Salmon in the Grande Ronde River Basin, Oregon
    Van Dyke, Erick S.
    Scarnecchia, Dennis L.
    Jonasson, Brian C.
    Carmichael, Richard W.
    [J]. NORTHWEST SCIENCE, 2010, 84 (01) : 9 - 19
  • [29] Use of otolith microstructure to estimate growth rates of juvenile Chinook salmon from a central valley, California stock
    Titus, RG
    Volkoff, MC
    Snider, WM
    [J]. EARLY LIFE HISTORY OF FISHES IN THE SAN FRANCISCO ESTUARY AND WATERSHED, 2004, 39 : 181 - 202
  • [30] Genetic variation and structure of Chinook salmon life history types in the Snake River
    Narum, Shawn R.
    Stephenson, Jeffrey J.
    Campbell, Matthew R.
    [J]. TRANSACTIONS OF THE AMERICAN FISHERIES SOCIETY, 2007, 136 (05) : 1252 - 1262