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Food habits and marine survival of juvenile Chinook and coho salmon from marine waters of Southeast Alaska
Authors:LAURIE A WEITKAMP  MOLLY V STURDEVANT
Institution:1. National Marine Fisheries Service, Northwest Fisheries Science Center, Newport Research Station, 2032 SE OSU Dr., Newport, OR 97365, USA;2. School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington, Box 355020, Seattle, WA 98195, USA;3. Auke Bay Laboratories, National Marine Fisheries Service, Alaska Fisheries Science Center, Ted Stevens Marine Research Institute, 17109 Pt. Lena Loop Rd., Juneau AK 99801, USA
Abstract:Little is known about the food habits of juvenile Chinook (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) and coho (Oncorhynchus kisutch) salmon in marine environments of Alaska, or whether their diets may have contributed to extremely high marine survival rates for coho salmon from Southeast Alaska and much more modest survival rates for Southeast Alaskan Chinook salmon. To address these issues, we documented the spatial and temporal variability of diets of both species collected from marine waters of Southeast Alaska during summers of 1997–2000. Food habits were similar: major prey items of both species included fishes, crab larvae, hyperiid amphipods, insects, and euphausiids. Multivariate analyses of diet composition indicated that the most distinct groups were formed at the smallest spatial and temporal scales (the haul), although groups also formed at larger scales, such as by month or habitat type. Our expectations for how food habits would influence survival were only partially supported. As predicted, Southeast Alaskan coho salmon had more prey in their stomachs overall 1.8% of body weight (BW)] and proportionally far fewer empty stomachs (0.7%) than either Alaskan Chinook (1.4% BW, 5.1% empty) or coho salmon from other regions. However, contrary to our expectations, coho salmon diets contained surprisingly few fish (49% by weight). Apparently, Alaskan coho salmon achieved extremely high marine survival rates despite a diet consisting largely of small, less energetically‐efficient crustacean prey. Our results suggest that diet quantity (how much is eaten) rather than diet quality (what is eaten) is important to marine survival.
Keywords:Chinook salmon  coho salmon  diets  marine ecology  marine survival  predator  prey  Southeast Alaska
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