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Vulnerability of Fraser River sockeye salmon to climate change: A life cycle perspective using expert judgments
Authors:Tim McDaniels  Sarah Wilmot  Michael Healey  Scott Hinch
Institution:1. Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability at the University of British Columbia, Lasserre Building, 433 – 6333 Memorial Road, Vancouver, BC Canada V6T 1Z4;2. School of Community & Regional Planning at the University of British Columbia, 433-6333 Memorial Road, Vancouver, BC Canada V6T 1Z2;3. Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability at the University of British Columbia, Aquatic Ecosystem Research Laboratory, 432 – 2202 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC Canada V6T 1Z4;4. Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability, University of British Columbia, 1933 West Mall Vancouver, BC Canada V6T 1Z4
Abstract:Fraser River sockeye salmon have been the basis for a major commercial fishery shared by Canada and the United States, and an important cultural foundation for many aboriginal groups; they are also of huge ecological significance throughout the Fraser Basin. The potential for altered aquatic habitat and temperature regimes due to climate change is an important concern for Fraser River sockeye salmon. This paper characterizes the vulnerability of Fraser River sockeye salmon to future climate change using an approach that is novel on three counts. First, previous efforts to assess the vulnerability of salmon to climate change have largely focused on only part of the life cycle, whereas we consider climate vulnerability at all stages in the life cycle. Second, we use the available scientific literature to provide a basis for structuring and eliciting judgments from fisheries science and management experts who research and manage these systems. Third, we consider prospects for mitigating the effects of climate change on sockeye salmon. Tests showed that participants’ judgments differentiated in statistically significant ways among questions that varied in terms of life stages, spawning regions and climate scenarios. The consensus among participants was that Fraser River sockeye are most vulnerable to climate change during the egg and returning adult stages of the life cycle. A high temperature scenario was seen as imposing the greatest risk on sockeye stocks, particularly those that migrate to the upper reaches of the Fraser River system and spawn earlier in the summer. The inability to alter water temperature and the highly constrained nature of sockeye management, with competing gear types and sequential fisheries over a long distance, suggest the potential to mitigate adverse effects is limited. Fraser River sockeye already demonstrate a great deal of adaptive capacity in utilizing heterogeneous habitats in different river sub-basins. This adaptability points to the potential value of policies to make stocks more resilient to uncertain futures.
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