B.C. study links low river flows with lower chinook salmon productivity
VANCOUVER — A study that links low summertime water flows in a British Columbia river with lower productivity across 22 generations of a struggling salmon population could help guide how rivers are managed to support fish, the authors say.
The study published Friday in the journal Ecological Solutions and Evidence used data from 1992 to 2013 to examine changes in the productivity of early summer chinook in the Nicola River, a tributary of the Thompson River in B.C.’s southern Interior.
The modelling predicted fish that were spawned and later reared when the river’s flows in August were 50 per cent below average had a 29 per cent lower productivity rate, referring to the number of offspring produced per spawning fish that survive to adulthood.
“The significance of this work is that we’ve been able to disentangle the influences of freshwater conditions from ocean conditions and really show that freshwater conditions are very important for this population,” said lead author Luke Warkentin.