2004
DOI: 10.1577/t03-103.1
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Estimating Indices of Abundance and Escapement of Pacific Salmon for Data‐Limited Situations

Abstract: We demonstrate the process of synchronously combining multiple sources of available fishery information to estimate total abundance in data‐limited situations. The application is specific to semelparous populations, such as Pacific salmon, where only data for spawners and recruits are necessary to describe the dynamics of these populations. We apply this technique to summer chum salmon Oncorhynchus keta of the Kuskokwim and Yukon rivers of Alaska. Since 1997, low numbers of returning chum salmon to these river… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…They recommended a lower-bound sustainable escapement goal of 40,000 Chum Salmon, which was adopted in 2010 (Estensen et al 2018), but recognized the challenge of managing for this goal in the mixed-stock fishery in the lower Yukon River. Our analyses, and those of others (Shotwell and Adkison 2004;Fleischman and Evenson 2010), indicate that Chum Salmon experience highly variable production dynamics that appear to be driven much more by marine environmental conditions than by the fishery.…”
Section: Chinook and Chum Salmon Productionsupporting
confidence: 70%
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“…They recommended a lower-bound sustainable escapement goal of 40,000 Chum Salmon, which was adopted in 2010 (Estensen et al 2018), but recognized the challenge of managing for this goal in the mixed-stock fishery in the lower Yukon River. Our analyses, and those of others (Shotwell and Adkison 2004;Fleischman and Evenson 2010), indicate that Chum Salmon experience highly variable production dynamics that appear to be driven much more by marine environmental conditions than by the fishery.…”
Section: Chinook and Chum Salmon Productionsupporting
confidence: 70%
“…The annual abundance of specific spawning populations, however, would lack management utility for corroboration of main-stem run strength indicators. By contrast, the strongly correlated patterns of escapements between Chum Salmon populations and the larger Yukon River summer run (Figure 8), as well as the highly correlated patterns of brood year production (Figure 12), make it appear that the species is behaving like a single drainage-wide population, a phenomenon similarly discussed by Shotwell and Adkison (2004). The high level of synchrony observed among Chum Salmon populations in the Yukon River would not be expected to effectively buffer the annual abundance of drainage-wide runs, but would provide greater management utility.…”
Section: Correlations In Production and Abundancementioning
confidence: 87%