Wild Atlantic Salmon Research To Get A Boost
Lead ASF researcher Dr. Fred Whoriskey commented, “Dramatic declines in Atlantic salmon numbers and many theories as to the possible causes prompted ASF to begin studying the problem in the 1990s. A few potential explanations for the declines include temperature change, fewer forage fish, and predation by seals and birds.”
ASF, working closely with industry and the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, developed a miniature tagging and tracking technology system that allows researchers to follow small salmon for long distances from their natal rivers out to sea as they migrate to their ocean feeding grounds.
ASF began developing the technology of implanting juvenile salmon with sonic transmitters and tracking them in 1994, and first successfully tracked juvenile salmon in both freshwater and the ocean in 1999. This pioneering work will benefit the Ocean Tracking Project as it has benefited research on the west coast, such as the Pacific Ocean Shelf Tracking Project, part of the International Census of Marine Life.
ASF has now had multiple-year experience of tracking juvenile salmon down rivers, including the Miramichi and Restigouche in
A small batch of young salmon from the acid-impacted West River Sheet Harbour in Nova Scotia is also being tracked to see how they are responding to remedial liming that ASF and the Nova Scotia Salmon Association (NSSA) have undertaken in that watershed to reduce its acidity. In 2009,
Sophisticated receiver arrays have been set up in the rivers, and across the Baie des Chaleurs, and, most importantly, across the Strait of Belle Isle between
One initial observation of the research is the old adage of “safety in numbers”. Dr. Whoriskey concluded, “The more salmon that make it down the river, the better chance they have of exiting the river estuary. In other words, traveling together increases each individual salmon’s odds of survival.”
The Atlantic Salmon Federation is an international, non-profit organization that promotes the conservation and wise management of wild Atlantic salmon and their environment. ASF has a network of seven regional councils (
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A backgrounder on ASF’s Tracking research can be found at:
http://asf.ca/docs/uploads/asf-tracking.pdf
Attachment: Photograph of Dr. Fred Whoriskey, ASF’s VP, Research and Environment
Cutline:
ASF's Dr. Fred Whoriskey supervises an ocean tracking program for wild Atlantic salmon that stretches from the Bay of Fundy to the coast of
ASF Contact: Sue Scott
Vice President - Communications
506 529-1027 or 506 529-4581





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