Trends in juvenile sockeye salmon rearing capacity, stock specific growth performance, and estuarine habitat use in the Chignik watershed, Alaska
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Abstract
Coastal watersheds provide a network of interconnected heterogeneous habitatsaccessible to mobile species. Multiple populations can exploit alternative habitats, buffering
overall abundances against perturbations in climate and ecosystem processes. In the Chignik
Lakes watershed, Alaska, sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) populations exhibit a diversity
of juvenile life history strategies, exploiting diverse freshwater and estuarine rearing habitats. In
2018, Chignik sockeye salmon stocks experienced a catastrophic collapse, threatening the
viability of commercial and subsistence harvest. The overall goal of this thesis was to investigate
how changes in juvenile sockeye salmon rearing capacity, growth performance, and habitat use
within the Chignik watershed may have contributed to the 2018 fishery disaster.
We compiled and analyzed multiple decades of habitat quality data to explore long-term
trends in the freshwater rearing capacity and growth performance of juvenile sockeye salmon in
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the years preceding the 2018 collapse. We identified increasing water temperatures in a shallow
lake, and more stable conditions in a deeper lake. Zooplankton prey quality increased in response
to both bottom-up and top-down food web dynamics. We observed strong effects of competition
and density dependence in sockeye salmon populations throughout the watershed. Although we
detected no evidence that freshwater habitat quality has declined, the data suggest that high early
life stage mortality in brood years of the 2018 collapse likely contributed to poor adult returns.
Using Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms, we successfully assigned individual juvenile
sockeye salmon to two distinct populations. We reenforced previous findings that body condition
reflects the productivity of an individual’s rearing habitat, regardless of stock of origin.
Additionally, we observed multiple stocks exploiting estuarine habitat for juvenile rearing for the
duration of the summer growing season.
Together, our results suggest habitat heterogeneity and population diversity buffer
sockeye salmon populations in the Chignik watershed. By exploiting alternative habitats,
multiple populations are able to achieve sufficient growth despite variability in local habitat
quality.
Description
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2025
