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Climate variability and marine survival of coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) in the Oregon production area
Authors:J. Anthony Koslow,Alistair J. Hobday,&   George W. Boehlert
Affiliation:Pacific Fisheries Environmental Laboratory, 1352 Lighthouse Avenue, Pacific Grove, CA 93950 USA,;CSIRO Marine Research, GPO Box 1538, Hobart, Tasmania 7001 Australia
Abstract:Time series of adult recruitment for natural runs of coho salmon from the Oregon coastal region (1970–94) and marine survival of hatchery-reared coho salmon from California to Washington (1960–94) are significantly correlated with a suite of meteorological and oceanographic variables related to the biological productivity of the local coastal region. These variables include strong upwelling, cool sea surface temperature (SST), strong wind mixing, a deep and weakly stratified mixed layer, and low coastal sea level, indicating strong transport of the California Current. Principal component analysis indicates that these variables work in concert to define the dominant modes of physical variability, which appear to regulate nutrient availability and biological productivity. Multiple regression analysis suggests that coho marine survival is significantly and independently related to the dominant modes acting over this region in the periods when the coho first enter the ocean and during the overwintering/spring period prior to their spawning migration. Linear relationships provided good fits to the data and were robust, capable of predicting randomly removed portions of the data set.
Keywords:California Current    climate    coho    Oncorhynchus kisutch    recruitment    salmon    survival
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