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Exploring the Potential Role of Late...
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Manishin, Kaitlyn A.
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Exploring the Potential Role of Late Stage Predation and Chinook Salmon Age Structure.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Exploring the Potential Role of Late Stage Predation and Chinook Salmon Age Structure./
作者:
Manishin, Kaitlyn A.
出版者:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, : 2018,
面頁冊數:
99 p.
附註:
Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 80-06.
Contained By:
Masters Abstracts International80-06.
標題:
Wildlife Management. -
電子資源:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=10978061
ISBN:
9780438703377
Exploring the Potential Role of Late Stage Predation and Chinook Salmon Age Structure.
Manishin, Kaitlyn A.
Exploring the Potential Role of Late Stage Predation and Chinook Salmon Age Structure.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2018 - 99 p.
Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 80-06.
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2018.
This item must not be sold to any third party vendors.
Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) populations across the North Pacific have displayed a decrease in body size-at-return resulting from declines both in age- and body size-at-maturity. These changes have precipitated the loss of the oldest age classes in some populations and have occurred throughout the range of this species, suggesting a shared - yet currently unknown - driver in the common marine environment. A hypothesis for the cause of these changes is intense and/or selective predation marine mortality after the first winter in the ocean, potentially from predators selectively removing relatively large sub-adult Chinook salmon. Here I consider the question: under what circumstances could predation on large sub-adult individuals by salmon sharks (Lamna ditropis) change the age structure of a Chinook salmon population? To address this question, I first estimated total per capita prey consumption by salmon sharks - an increasingly acknowledged predator of salmon on the high seas - using three methods: 1) daily ration requirement, 2) bioenergetic mass balance, 3) and a von Bertalanffy growth model. Second, I examined the effects of additional predation on an indicator Chinook salmon population from the Yukon River by simulating alternative predation scenarios with a stage-structured life cycle model. Scenarios described the strength and selectivity of predation, and the resulting simulated age structure was then compared to observed demography. The selectivity and intensity of removals required to produce this change in age structure were considered in the context of top predators, focusing on salmon sharks. The daily ration method yielded individual salmon shark consumption estimates of 1461 and 2202 kg?yr-1, the mass-balance method produced estimates of 1870 kg?yr-1, 2070 kg?yr-1, 1610 kg?yr-1, and 1762 kg?yr-1, depending on assumed diet, and the growth model output estimates of 16,900 kg?yr-1 or 20,800 kg?yr-1, depending on assumed assimilation efficiency. The per capita prey consumption estimates from the mass-balance method may be the most realistic because they incorporated life history data specific to salmon sharks and did not produce extreme values. Taken as a whole, these estimates suggest salmon sharks have energetic requirements similar to those of piscivourous marine mammals and corroborates conclusions of previous research suggesting that endothermic fishes exhibit metabolic rates similar to marine mammals. The simulated mortality scenarios that most closely mimicked observed shifts in age structure of the indicator Chinook salmon population focused intense and selective predation on the third year of Chinook salmon residence in the ocean. This simulated predation is corroborated by emerging results from an independent electronic tagging study in which tagged Chinook salmon experienced high predation rates, and research suggesting that killer whales (Orcinus orca) selectively prey upon Chinook salmon in their third year at sea. In summary, salmon sharks likely have high energetic requirements that could result in a large biomass of prey consumed, Chinook salmon populations are sensitive to predation during the third ocean year, and salmon sharks and other predators appear to frequently consume fish at that ocean stage. Taken together, these lines of evidence point to a potentially important mechanism for top down pressure on Chinook salmon populations that may explain observed changes in age-at-return, which in turn can affect population productivity. Future work and more robust data on predator distributions and abundances are needed to explore this finding further.
ISBN: 9780438703377Subjects--Topical Terms:
3433963
Wildlife Management.
Exploring the Potential Role of Late Stage Predation and Chinook Salmon Age Structure.
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Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) populations across the North Pacific have displayed a decrease in body size-at-return resulting from declines both in age- and body size-at-maturity. These changes have precipitated the loss of the oldest age classes in some populations and have occurred throughout the range of this species, suggesting a shared - yet currently unknown - driver in the common marine environment. A hypothesis for the cause of these changes is intense and/or selective predation marine mortality after the first winter in the ocean, potentially from predators selectively removing relatively large sub-adult Chinook salmon. Here I consider the question: under what circumstances could predation on large sub-adult individuals by salmon sharks (Lamna ditropis) change the age structure of a Chinook salmon population? To address this question, I first estimated total per capita prey consumption by salmon sharks - an increasingly acknowledged predator of salmon on the high seas - using three methods: 1) daily ration requirement, 2) bioenergetic mass balance, 3) and a von Bertalanffy growth model. Second, I examined the effects of additional predation on an indicator Chinook salmon population from the Yukon River by simulating alternative predation scenarios with a stage-structured life cycle model. Scenarios described the strength and selectivity of predation, and the resulting simulated age structure was then compared to observed demography. The selectivity and intensity of removals required to produce this change in age structure were considered in the context of top predators, focusing on salmon sharks. The daily ration method yielded individual salmon shark consumption estimates of 1461 and 2202 kg?yr-1, the mass-balance method produced estimates of 1870 kg?yr-1, 2070 kg?yr-1, 1610 kg?yr-1, and 1762 kg?yr-1, depending on assumed diet, and the growth model output estimates of 16,900 kg?yr-1 or 20,800 kg?yr-1, depending on assumed assimilation efficiency. The per capita prey consumption estimates from the mass-balance method may be the most realistic because they incorporated life history data specific to salmon sharks and did not produce extreme values. Taken as a whole, these estimates suggest salmon sharks have energetic requirements similar to those of piscivourous marine mammals and corroborates conclusions of previous research suggesting that endothermic fishes exhibit metabolic rates similar to marine mammals. The simulated mortality scenarios that most closely mimicked observed shifts in age structure of the indicator Chinook salmon population focused intense and selective predation on the third year of Chinook salmon residence in the ocean. This simulated predation is corroborated by emerging results from an independent electronic tagging study in which tagged Chinook salmon experienced high predation rates, and research suggesting that killer whales (Orcinus orca) selectively prey upon Chinook salmon in their third year at sea. In summary, salmon sharks likely have high energetic requirements that could result in a large biomass of prey consumed, Chinook salmon populations are sensitive to predation during the third ocean year, and salmon sharks and other predators appear to frequently consume fish at that ocean stage. Taken together, these lines of evidence point to a potentially important mechanism for top down pressure on Chinook salmon populations that may explain observed changes in age-at-return, which in turn can affect population productivity. Future work and more robust data on predator distributions and abundances are needed to explore this finding further.
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