Upper thermal limits on the oceanic distribution of Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.) in the spring
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 1995 papers
Abstract
Pacific salmon are normally thought to be distributed throughout the Subarctic Pacific, an area where they form the dominant fish fauna. We use a series of generalized additive models to show that salmon exhibit a sharp step-function response to temperature in the oceanic eastern north Pacific in spring. The critical temperature defining the southern boundary varied by species: 10.4 °C for pink and chum salmon, 9.4 °C for coho salmon, and 8.9 °C for sockeye salmon. These thermal limits occur well to the north of the southern boundary of the Transition Zone, at widely separated geographic positions within the Subarctic Domain, and at temperatures much lower than the lethal upper limit for each species. The sharp decline in abundance with temperature, and the remarkably low temperatures at which the response occurs, suggests that thermal barriers form an effective limit to the offshore distribution of salmon in spring, and can limit the distribution of Pacific salmon to a relatively small area of the Subarctic Pacific. The strength of this response is presumably the direct result of strong evolutionary selection. Future temperature changes in the North Pacific could therefore have a direct impact on the production dynamics of Pacific salmon.
Related Papers
- → The top 10 list: criteria of authenticity for DNA from ancient and forensic samples(2003)110 cited
- → Genetic introgression between masu salmon <i>Oncorhynchus masou masou</i> and red spotted masu salmon <i>Oncorhynchus masou ishikawae</i>(2017)9 cited
- → Age‐related thermal habitat use by Pacific salmon Oncorhynchus spp.(2010)20 cited
- → Status of the Genetic Resources of Pacific Rim Salmon(1993)2 cited
- → Genetic Differentiation and Relationship within and between Natural and Cultured Populations of Oncorhynchus masou Complex in Japan(1993)1 cited