Miller Jessica A, Teel David J, Peterson William T, Baptista Antonio M
Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Coastal Oregon Marine Experiment Station, Oregon State University, Newport, Oregon, United States of America.
Northwest Fisheries Science Center, NOAA Fisheries, Manchester, Washington, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Jun 12;9(6):e99814. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0099814. eCollection 2014.
Research on regulatory mechanisms in biological populations often focuses on environmental covariates. An integrated approach that combines environmental indices with organismal-level information can provide additional insight on regulatory mechanisms. Survival of spring/summer Snake River Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) is consistently low whereas some adjacent populations with similar life histories experience greater survival. It is not known if populations with differential survival respond similarly during early marine residence, a critical period in the life history. Ocean collections, genetic stock identification, and otolith analyses were combined to evaluate the growth-mortality and match-mismatch hypotheses during early marine residence of spring/summer Snake River Chinook salmon. Interannual variation in juvenile attributes, including size at marine entry and marine growth rate, was compared with estimates of survival and physical and biological metrics. Multiple linear regression and multi-model inference were used to evaluate the relative importance of biological and physical metrics in explaining interannual variation in survival. There was relatively weak support for the match-mismatch hypothesis and stronger evidence for the growth-mortality hypothesis. Marine growth and size at capture were strongly, positively related to survival, a finding similar to spring Chinook salmon from the Mid-Upper Columbia River. In hindcast models, basin-scale indices (Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) and the North Pacific Gyre Oscillation (NPGO)) and biological indices (juvenile salmon catch-per-unit-effort (CPUE) and a copepod community index (CCI)) accounted for substantial and similar portions of variation in survival for juvenile emigration years 1998-2008 (R2>0.70). However, in forecast models for emigration years 2009-2011, there was an increasing discrepancy between predictions based on the PDO (50-448% of observed value) compared with those based on the NPGO (68-212%) or biological indices (CPUE and CCI: 83-172%). Overall, the PDO index was remarkably informative in earlier years but other basin-scale and biological indices provided more accurate indications of survival in recent years.
对生物种群调控机制的研究通常聚焦于环境协变量。一种将环境指标与个体水平信息相结合的综合方法,能够为调控机制提供更多见解。蛇河春季/夏季奇努克鲑(Oncorhynchus tshawytscha)的存活率一直较低,而一些具有相似生活史的相邻种群却有更高的存活率。尚不清楚存活率不同的种群在海洋早期居留这一生命史关键时期的反应是否相似。综合利用海洋样本采集、遗传种群鉴定和耳石分析,来评估蛇河春季/夏季奇努克鲑海洋早期居留期间的生长 - 死亡率及匹配 - 不匹配假说。将幼鱼特征的年际变化(包括进入海洋时的大小和海洋生长率)与存活率估计值以及物理和生物学指标进行比较。运用多元线性回归和多模型推断来评估生物学和物理指标在解释存活率年际变化中的相对重要性。对匹配 - 不匹配假说的支持相对较弱,而对生长 - 死亡率假说的证据更强。海洋生长和捕获时的大小与存活率呈强烈的正相关,这一发现与中上游哥伦比亚河的春季奇努克鲑相似。在回溯模型中,流域尺度指标(太平洋年代际振荡(PDO)和北太平洋环流振荡(NPGO))以及生物学指标(幼鲑单位努力捕捞量(CPUE)和桡足类群落指数(CCI))在解释1998 - 2008年幼鱼洄游年份的存活率变化中占了相当且相似的比例(R2>0.70)。然而,在2009 - 2011年洄游年份的预测模型中,基于PDO的预测值(为观测值的50 - 448%)与基于NPGO的预测值(68 - 212%)或生物学指标(CPUE和CCI:83 - 172%)之间的差异越来越大。总体而言,PDO指数在早期年份具有显著的信息价值,但近年来其他流域尺度和生物学指标能提供更准确的存活率指示。