Skeena River Sockeye Escapement and Distribution

1952 ◽  
Vol 8c (7) ◽  
pp. 453-468 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. R. Brett

Population estimates made from observations on the number of sockeye salmon in the various spawning streams of the Skeena River, B.C., during the period 1944–48 are presented. The methods used include a fence count at Babine Lake, the most important spawing area, supplemented by stream counting in the other areas and sample tagging at Lakelse. Estimates made at Babine by the latter methods were compared with the fence counts; the stream count estimates were about one-third of the actual number present, whereas estimates from tagging were about twice the actual.A brief description of the spawning streams of the Skeena is accompanied by a map showing their location. Best estimates of 1946–47 escapements to major spawning areas are: Babine, 480,000; Morice, 70,000; Bear, 42,000; Lakelse, 29,000. These comprise 92 per cent of the total for the river system. The area of the spawning beds used by sockeye in the system is about 100 acres, or of the order of 1.5 square yards per spawning pair. The division of the whole run is approximately 45 per cent to the commercial fishery, 6 per cent to the Indian fishery, and 49 per cent escapement.

1946 ◽  
Vol 6e (7) ◽  
pp. 483-490 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. E. Foerster

Eggs from Cultus lake, a lower Fraser river tributary, and from Adams river, in the Shuswap lake region, were transferred to Eagle river, a formerly important sockeye salmon stream at the head of Shuswap lake. The resulting fingerlings were marked, prior to liberation into Eagle river, by removal of certain fins for subsequent identification. Recovery of surviving adults—few in the commercial fishery, few, if any, in the original native spawning areas, none at Eagle river from the Cultus lake egg transfers and very few from the Adams river shipments—indicates that restoration of depleted sockeye areas cannot be achieved merely by introducing eggs from any outside well-populated areas.


1975 ◽  
Vol 32 (8) ◽  
pp. 1369-1381 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. E. Ricker ◽  
H. D. Smith

Three factors are examined as an aid to interpreting the historical sequence of Skeena sockeye catches. One of these (Exploitation Mechanism 1) affects the catch directly, the other two affect catch by way of increasing or decreasing the recruitment produced by a given number of spawners. "Exploitation Mechanism 1" of Ricker (1973) makes the catch taken from any given brood during a time of increasing rate of exploitation greater than when exploitation is steady or decreasing; this is the main reason for excellent catches from 1905 to 1925. "Exploitation Mechanism 2" makes the progeny of any given number of spawners less numerous under conditions of maximum sustainable yield than during the period when rate of utilization is increasing; as a result recruitments observed prior to 1930 overestimate the potential productivity of the system and hence the sustainable yield. Mechanisms 1 and 2 are both operative even if the best rate of exploitation is never exceeded. In fact, however, the rate of exploitation began to exceed the optimum level of 50–55% about 1908, continued to increase until 1928, and then slowly decreased until the optimum level was reached about 1945; during the latter period, and for about 15 yr subsequently, catches were further depressed as spawning stocks were slowly rebuilt. Another factor affecting recruitment is the apparent existence of interaction between neighboring year-classes in respect to survival rate. Although the exact mechanism of this interaction is not yet known, it has produced three sequences of moderately "dominant" year-classes, the most recent being 1959–63–67–71, in spite of the complication of having two important ages of maturity for Skeena sockeye. More important is the fact that during the recent period large spawnings (0.75–1 million) have produced poor returns while moderately small spawnings (0.25–0.5 million) have produced larger year-classes than they did at any earlier period — in spite of the handicap of Mechanism 2. This apparent interaction between broods implies that one or more small spawnings are a necessary prerequisite for unusually successful reproduction by a later large one, and that successful large spawnings depress the reproduction of subsequent smaller ones. When all these factors are considered together, the observed trend of the Skeena catches can be reproduced. Maximum natural sustainable yield from the system would have been achieved about 1960 except for 2 yr of much reduced reproduction caused by the Babine River rock slide of 1951. Currently, the increased numbers of fry produced in artificial spawning channels at Babine Lake have contributed to large smolt runs that are now beginning to appear in the adult catches.


2014 ◽  
Vol 179 (4) ◽  
pp. 10-31
Author(s):  
Elena V. Golub’

Long-term data on age composition for Chukchi populations of sockeye salmon are presented. Spawners of 23 ages are recognized in the period 1970-2013 for 10 populations: 2+, 3+, 0.1+, 0.2+, 0.3+, 0.4+, 0.5+, 1.1+, 1.2+, 1.3+, 1.4+, 1.5+, 2.1+, 2.2+, 2.3+, 2.4+, 2.5+, 3.1+, 3.2+, 3.3+, 3.4+, 4.2+, and 4.3+. The brood stock basis is formed by five- and six-year fish of 1-2-year freshwater feeding and 3-year marine feeding. The greatest diversity in the age composition is observed at the northern limit of the Asian sockeye salmon natural habitat - i.e. in the Seutakan and Achchen lake-river systems. The spawners dropped into the sea at the age of 0+ and 1+ years are more common in the populations with prevailing limnophilous forms of sockeye (rivers Khatyrka, Tumanskaya and Anadyr, Seutakan lake-river system), and the spawners dropped at the age 2+ and 3+ years - in the populations with domination of its rheophilous form (Meinypilgyn lake-river system, Orianda and Amaam lagoons). As compared with the sockeye salmon from central spawning areas of the habitat, the Chukchi sockeye has more complicated age composition of reproductive part of stocks, greater duration of marine feeding, females predominance among fast-maturing fish returning after 2 years of marine life, higher portion of males in senior age groups, and minor level of kokanee salmon and jacks. Brief description of spawning and/or feeding ponds for Chukchi sockeye salmon is presented.


1958 ◽  
Vol 36 (8) ◽  
pp. 833-838 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. D. Wood

The non-protein nitrogenous constituents of muscle of migrating sockeye salmon were investigated. These constituents were found to be the same in both male and female fish and were present in approximately the same amounts in both sexes. The histidine content of the muscle in all fish decreased to one fifth of the original value during the early stages of the migratory journey and remained at the low level thereafter. Some of the other constituents changed to a smaller extent, usually increasing in the later stages of the migration. This was especially noticeable in female fish. However, the increase in the concentration of these constituents in the muscle was due to a decrease in the amount of muscle in the fish rather than to an increase in the amounts of the compounds themselves.


2001 ◽  
Vol 79 (8) ◽  
pp. 1472-1489 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julie D'Amours ◽  
Stéphanie Thibodeau ◽  
Réjean Fortin

Several fish species that spawn in lotic habitats have a larval-drift phase which is a major determinant of their reproductive success. The main objective of this study was to compare seasonal, diel, longitudinal, transverse, and vertical variations in rates of lake sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens), Stizostedion spp., Catostomus spp., Moxostoma spp., quillback (Carpiodes cyprinus), and mooneye (Hiodon tergisus) larval drift in Des Prairies River (DPR) near Montreal (Quebec), which is one of the major lotic spawning habitats of the St. Lawrence River system. Larval sampling was conducted in the spring of 1994 and 1995 for the six taxa, and on a more restricted basis for lake sturgeon in 1996–1998, using drift nets set at several transects, stations, depths, and periods of the day, along a 19 km long section of river beginning ca. 2 km downstream from the DPR power house. For all taxa except lake sturgeon, peak larval drift occurred ca. 1 week earlier in 1995 than in 1994. The sequence was very similar between years, beginning with Stizostedion spp., followed by Catostomus spp., then lake sturgeon, quillback, and mooneye drifting simultaneously, and finally Moxostoma spp. Generally, for all taxa except quillback, whose multimodal drift pattern suggests intermittent, prolonged spawning, larval-drift profiles showed one major seasonal mode, which was observed simultaneously at all transects. For all taxa except quillback, drift rates peaked between 21:00 and 03:00 and were minimal during daylight hours. Lake sturgeon and Stizostedion spp. larval drift rates decreased radically from the most upstream to the most downstream transect, suggesting that both taxa spawn mostly in the vicinity of the DPR power house. More studies are required to explain this longitudinal decline in drift rates, particularly for lake sturgeon. The other taxa showed longitudinal variation in larval drift rates, suggesting that they spawn near the DPR power house and (or) in the Île de Pierre Rapids, ca. 12 km downstream. At all transects, larval drift rates for the six taxa were generally higher in the right half (Montreal) of the river, suggesting that eggs are deposited mostly in this part of the river at the two major spawning areas and that larvae tend to remain in the same general corridors during downstream migration. For all taxa, though to a lesser extent for lake sturgeon, nocturnal drift rates tend to be higher near the surface than at mid-depth and near the bottom, the reverse situation being observed for diurnal drift rates.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Coen Teunissen ◽  
Isabella Voce

This report estimates the cost of pure cybercrime to individuals in Australia in 2019. A survey was administered to a sample of 11,840 adults drawn from two online panels—one using probability sampling and the other non-probability sampling—with the resulting data weighted to better reflect the distribution of the wider Australian population. Thirty-four percent of respondents had experienced some form of pure cybercrime, with 14 percent being victimised in the last 12 months. This is equivalent to nearly 6.7 million Australian adults having ever been the victim of pure cybercrime, and 2.8 million Australians being victimised in the past year. Drawing on these population estimates, the total economic impact of pure cybercrime in 2019 was approximately $3.5b. This encompasses $1.9b in money directly lost by victims, $597m spent dealing with the consequences of victimisation, and $1.4b spent on prevention costs. Victims recovered $389m.


1960 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 347-351 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. D. Wood ◽  
D. W. Duncan ◽  
M. Jackson

During the first 250 miles (400 km) of spawning migration of Fraser River sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) the free histidine content of the muscle, alimentary tract, and head+skin+bones+tail decreased to a small fraction of the initial value. A further decrease occurred in the levels of this amino acid in the alimentary tract during the subsequent 415-mile (657-km) migration to the spawning grounds, no change being observed with the other tissues. Comparatively small changes in free histidine were found with heart, spleen, liver, kidney and gonads during migration.


2000 ◽  
Vol 203 (7) ◽  
pp. 1161-1172 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Novales Flamarique

This study examines the spectral sensitivity and cone topography of the sockeye salmon Oncorhynchus nerka throughout its life history with special emphasis on ultraviolet sensitivity. Electrophysiological recordings from the optic nerve show that ultraviolet sensitivity is greatly diminished at the smolt stage but reappears in adult fish weighing about 201 g. Concomitantly, light microscopy observations of the retina show that ultraviolet cones disappear from the dorsal and temporal retina at the smolt stage but reappear at the adult stage. These changes occur for sockeye salmon raised in fresh water or salt water after smoltification. In contrast to this ultraviolet cycle, the other cone mechanisms (short-, middle- and long-wavelength-sensitive) and the rod mechanism remain present throughout ontogeny. The natural appearance and disappearance of ultraviolet cones in salmonid retinas follows surges in blood thyroxine at critical developmental periods. Their presence coincides with times of prominent feeding on zooplankton and/or small fish that may be more visible under ultraviolet light. It is proposed that the primary function of ultraviolet cones in salmonids is to improve prey contrast.


1984 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 278-285 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan P. Farlinger ◽  
Richard J. Beamish

Pacific lamprey (Lampetra tridentata) were first observed in Babine Lake, the largest natural lake wholly contained in British Columbia, in 1963 and are currently found along approximately 15% of the length of the lake near the outlet. The number of spawning adults in 1982 was estimated to be 7281. Since Babine Lake is a major nursery area for sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka), the colonization of this lake by a parasitic lamprey is of concern, particularly if the species can become nonanadromous. The colonization may be beneficial if a commercial fishery can be sustained and if the species does not begin to feed in freshwater. The reason for the recent colonization is unknown but it coincides with increased human manipulation of fishes and habitat, including the removal of a major rock slide, 65 km downstream of the lake.


Author(s):  
PASQUALE FOGGIA ◽  
GENNARO PERCANNELLA ◽  
CARLO SANSONE ◽  
MARIO VENTO

In some Computer Vision applications there is the need for grouping, in one or more clusters, only a part of the whole dataset. This happens, for example, when samples of interest for the application at hand are present together with several noisy samples. In this paper we present a graph-based algorithm for cluster detection that is particularly suited for detecting clusters of any size and shape, without the need of specifying either the actual number of clusters or the other parameters. The algorithm has been tested on data coming from two different computer vision applications. A comparison with other four state-of-the-art graph-based algorithms was also provided, demonstrating the effectiveness of the proposed approach.


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