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State of Environment Reporting
What
is the Relationship Between Climate and Migration Success of Sockeye
Salmon?
Average
Fraser River Temperature (1953-1988)


SOURCE:
Historical temperature data from the Pacific Salmon Commission,
1941-1998. Historical weather data from Meteorological Service of
Canada, Environment Canada 1953-1998. Analysis by John Morrison,
Institute of Ocean Sciences, 2001 for the Ministry of Water, Land
and Air Protection. NOTES: Results are statistically significant
at the 95 percent level.

Effects
of Warm Water Temperatures on Sockeye Salmon

SOURCE: Graphic
from Temperature Rising: Climate Change in Southwestern British
Columbia. 1999. Poster.
What is the
relationship between climate and migration success of sockeye salmon?
- The average
summer temperature of the Fraser River increased by 1.1°C
between 1953 and 1998. This warming trend appears to be largely
due to changes in local climate, including increasing air temperature,
during the same time period.
- The Fraser
River supports important salmon runs. Every year, Sockeye migrate
upriver to spawn at more than 150 sites in the river system.
- In several
recent years, en route mortality for some Fraser River Sockeye
runs was greater than 50%. Sockeye migrate in the summer when
water temperature is the warmest but prefer colder water temperatures
than other salmon species and may therefore be the salmon species
most sensitive to climate change.
- Exposure
to warmer water can speed up metabolic processes, creating stress
in migrating fish. Fish may die from exhaustion or infection or
they may reach the spawning grounds but be unable to spawn.
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