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Evidence of Handling Mortality of Adult Chum Salmon Caused by Fish Wheel Capture in the Yukon River, Alaska
Author(s) -
Underwood Tevis J.,
Bromaghin Jeffrey F.,
Klosiewski Steve P.
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
north american journal of fisheries management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.587
H-Index - 72
eISSN - 1548-8675
pISSN - 0275-5947
DOI - 10.1577/m02-006
Subject(s) - fish <actinopterygii> , mark and recapture , oncorhynchus , fishery , geography , environmental science , biology , ecology , demography , population , sociology
From 1996 to 1998, marked fish from a mark–recapture experiment were used to examine potential effects of fish wheel capture, handling, and tagging on adult chum salmon Oncorhynchus keta in the Yukon River, Alaska. Four fish wheels equipped with live holding boxes were used to capture fish, two at the marking site and two at the recapture site. During the 3 years of the study we annually marked 8,513–18,632 fish with individually numbered spaghetti tags; annual tag returns external to the mark–recapture experiment (not by project fish wheels) ranged from 594 to 1,007. Individual salmon were captured from one to four times in the four project fish wheels used in the mark–recapture experiment. Tag returns, interviews, carcass surveys, and data from other management projects indicated that the proportion of fish with marks decreased as distance from the marking site increased. Nine possible explanations for these observations were considered, but fish mortality associated with capture and handling appeared to be the most likely cause. Tags returned outside of the mark–recapture experiment were used to investigate the relationship between the capture history within the experiment and upriver recapture. Recapture probabilities declined significantly as the number of times a fish was captured increased. Our results raise concern over the relatively common use of fish wheels for gathering in‐season management data and for other research purposes. We recommend more definitive investigation of these phenomena, a review of fish wheel construction and operation to minimize potential effects to salmon populations, reexamination of the efficacy of live box capture as a management tool, and development of alternatives to current live box capture practices.