Commercial fishermen and
scientists from Oregon, California and Washington have agreed
to collaborate on a critical coast-wide study to learn more
about salmon distribution, migration and behavior in the
Pacific Ocean, but an alarming projected shortage of fish this
year is putting their research in jeopardy.
Ironically the study, which expands a two-year pilot
program began by Oregon State University researchers, is
designed to help protect weak salmon stocks.
"We've got the funding, we've got the science and we've got
the interest and cooperation of the fishing industry," said
Gil Sylvia, director of the Coastal Oregon Marine Experiment
Station at OSU's Hatfield Marine Science Center in Newport,
Ore. "Now, we just need some salmon."
During the pilot project, the OSU scientists found they
could trace genetic markers of salmon caught in the ocean
through small samples of fin or tissue and within 24 hours
pinpoint an individual salmon's river basin of origin. The
hope, Sylvia says, is that an expanded study will allow the
scientists to learn more about fish behavior in the ocean and
whether salmon from, say, the Sacramento River or the Klamath
River travel in clusters and feed in certain areas.
"This is ground-breaking research that could allow resource
managers to keep much of the ocean open for fishing, yet
protect weakened runs of fish," Sylvia said. "There are
preliminary indications that salmon destined for certain river
systems do behave differently, but we need more data from a
broader sampling before any management implications become
clear."
Researchers are hoping the Pacific Fisheries Management
Council will allow fishermen this year to catch a quota of
fish and also share fins and tissue samples with scientists
for genetic identification, or if that's not possible, at
least allow the scientists to catch and release a select
number of salmon, maintaining only a piece of the tail fin for
research.
The PFMC Thursday recommended to NOAA Fisheries that this
year there should be no salmon fishing off the California
coast and most of Oregon, with restricted fishing along the
Washington coast.
For the past two years, the Collaborative Research on
Oregon Ocean Salmon project, or CROOS, has paired Oregon State
University scientists and the state's commercial fishing
industry in a study to improve scientific knowledge about
salmon behavior in the ocean. More than 190 salmon fishermen
from 11 Oregon counties were trained in sampling protocols as
part of the project, which was funded by the Oregon Watershed
Enhancement Board.
The fishermen clipped fins and took tissues samples from
the salmon before processing them, and logged when and where
the fish were caught using a handheld GPS unit. The scientists
brought the samples back to Hatfield Marine Science Center
laboratories at Newport and conducted the genetic studies.
In the first year of the project, the scientists were able
to match 2,100 salmon caught to a river, basin or specific
region with 90 percent probability, according to Michael
Banks, an OSU geneticist and director of the scientific
portion of the project. Not all samples work flawlessly, Banks
said, and genetic markers for some river systems are similar
to others. Still, the scientists were able to confidently
pinpoint the origin of roughly four out of every five salmon
they tested.
Of those fish, 42 carried coded wire tags from hatcheries
that identified where the fish were from. Without knowing that
nugget of information, the scientists ran their genetic
protocols and found they hit the mark on 41 of the 42 fish,
Banks pointed out.
"That was pretty good validation that our methods work,"
Banks said.
Buoyed by the results, the CROOS leaders sought to expand
their studies in 2008. The two years of field study focused
solely on the ocean off Oregon -- and much of the study was
concentrated off the central Oregon coast. Broadening the
scope of the research to include Washington and California is
critical, Sylvia says, because of the migratory nature of the
salmon.
The CROOS project leaders have engaged the Oregon Salmon
Commission, the California Salmon Commission and the
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife in the project, as
well as NOAA's National Marine Fisheries Service, and they are
awaiting the final word from the Pacific Fisheries Management
Council.
Washington has used genetic identification methods to
estimate fisheries stock composition for several years, but
has not yet paired that with ocean sampling to determine
at-sea stock distribution, the researchers say. California
began its own genetic tracking project in 2006 and continued
last year, although on a much smaller scale than Oregon.
Having the three states join forces will give scientists a
much better idea of West Coast salmon migration, the
researchers pointed out.
"The research is particularly important because some of the
preliminary results suggest interesting patterns in salmon
behavior that need to be validated," said Renee Bellinger, an
OSU faculty research assistant who is coordinating the
three-state research effort. "We recorded 'pulses' of fish
that would move at one time – from the Rogue River, for
example -- but we couldn't gauge the range of movement or
duration because the sampling period wasn't long enough."
If approved, scientists in all three states will work with
commercial fishermen in their respective regions to collect
the samples that they will test, using the CROOS protocols.
They hope to look at different sampling blocks over time and
space, covering the Pacific Ocean from northern Washington to
the San Francisco Bay area.
In addition to their genetic studies, the scientists also
are monitoring ocean conditions -- including temperature,
salinity, dissolved oxygen content and other factors -- to
determine their effect on salmon distribution, Sylvia said.
Some of that information is collected by the fishermen, though
most is supplied by unmanned undersea gliders that can be
programmed to roam the same stretches of ocean where the
fishermen are working.
"There is a tremendous amount of interest from the fishing
industry in this project," Sylvia said. "This is a case where
science may help provide solutions to a complex and difficult
management problem."
Specific goals of the Oregon-based CROOS project include:
-- Broadening the genetic stock identification research to
test different hypotheses on location and migration of salmon,
and determine if hatchery fish behave differently than wild
fish;
-- Use data from vessels and undersea gliders to monitor
ocean conditions that can be tied to biological data to
determine if temperature, salinity or other factors influence
migration;
-- Sample tissues from harvested salmon to test for
parasites that previously have infected Klamath basin fish;
-- Evaluate different digital data logging instruments that
can be used in real time on small fishing vessels;
-- Track commercially harvested salmon through a barcode
system from vessel to market and develop websites that allow
consumers to learn more about their purchase;
-- Design a "real time" genetic stock identification-based
website to share data with multiple audiences;
-- Develop potential management simulation scenarios based
on the data to see if what the researchers learn through their
data collection is sufficient to influence the in-season
decision-making process.