2016
DOI: 10.1111/fog.12190
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Effects of the North Pacific Current on the productivity of 163 Pacific salmon stocks

Abstract: Horizontal ocean transport can influence the dynamics of higher‐trophic‐level species in coastal ecosystems by altering either physical oceanographic conditions or the advection of food resources into coastal areas. In this study, we investigated whether variability in two North Pacific Current (NPC) indices was associated with changes in productivity of North American Pacific salmon stocks. Specifically, we used Bayesian hierarchical models to estimate the effects of the north‐south location of the NPC bifurc… Show more

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Cited by 44 publications
(56 citation statements)
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References 48 publications
(90 reference statements)
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“…Following Mueter, Peterman, et al () and Malick et al (), I grouped sockeye salmon stocks into three groups based on the large marine ecosystem the stock enters the ocean into (Figure ). Stocks originating in B.C.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Following Mueter, Peterman, et al () and Malick et al (), I grouped sockeye salmon stocks into three groups based on the large marine ecosystem the stock enters the ocean into (Figure ). Stocks originating in B.C.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…and southeast Alaska were grouped into the West Coast region; Central Alaska stocks (e.g., Alaska Peninsula, Kodiak) were grouped into the Gulf of Alaska region; and stocks from western Alaska were grouped into the Bering Sea region. The inclusion of southeast Alaska stocks in the West Coast region differs from both Mueter, Peterman, et al () and Malick et al (), and was based on evidence that productivity of southeast Alaska sockeye salmon stocks tends to covary more strongly with more southern sockeye salmon stocks than Central Alaska stocks (Peterman & Dorner, ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The recovery plan synthesized the available data, reviewed the evidence for factors potentially limiting survival, and identified actions that could be taken to promote recovery (Connors and Atnarko Sockeye Recovery Planning Committee 2016). Broad-scale declines in Sockeye Salmon survival across British Columbia (Peterman and Dorner 2012) suggest that common mechanisms that are operating at sea such as the changing ocean climate (Malick et al 2017) and competition with increasing abundances of other salmon (Ruggerone and Connors 2015), coupled with disturbances affecting freshwater survival and productivity (including forest fires and severe floods), likely have contributed to the depressed state of Sockeye Salmon in Atnarko (Connors and Atnarko Sockeye Recovery Planning Committee 2016). The recovery plan identified the incidental harvest of Sockeye Salmon in commercial gillnet and seine fisheries that target other species as well as harvest in Indigenous fisheries for food, social, and ceremonial (FSC) purposes as a potential, but poorly understood, impediments to recovery.…”
Section: Recovery Prospects For a Collapsed Salmon Populationmentioning
confidence: 99%