Booming northern orcas devouring chinook salmon that sustain southern resident killer whales

wildmanyeah

Crew Member
Booming northern orcas devouring chinook salmon that sustain southern resident killer whales

Killer whales native to the waters of northern B.C. and Alaska are selectively eating millions of large, nutritious chinook salmon long before the fish make their way to the feeding grounds frequented by our dwindling southern resident killer whales, according to new research.

https://vancouversun.com/news/local...-that-sustain-southern-resident-killer-whales


Conservation efforts aimed at both killer whales and chinook salmon may be having “unexpected consequences,” said the study’s lead author Jan Ohlberger, from the University of Washington’s School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences.

The problem is that booming populations of northern resident killer whales and Alaska residents are getting first crack at the best chinooks, those more than 76 centimetres (30 inches) long.

Unlike the southern resident group which is hovering at about 73 individuals, there are 300 northern residents and 2,300 Alaska residents, about three times as many as 30 years ago.

“Chinook from the Columbia River and B.C. river systems move north along the coast to the Gulf of Alaska where they put on most of their mass,” said co-author Daniel Schindler, a UW professor of aquatic and fishery sciences.

“It’s pretty clear that Alaska killer whales and northern residents get first shot at (the chinook) before they head south through a gauntlet of predators and that’s when the dregs show up in the Salish Sea,” he said.

In recent years, Canadian and American researchers have observed that the southern residents appear to be malnourished. Three members have perished this year, including one that showed obvious signs of body-fat depletion.

All three resident killer whale groups prefer large chinook and together eat about 2.5 million adult chinook salmon per year.

That feeding pressure has led to a decline in the body size of chinook and the number of large chinook over the past 40 years, according to the study published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Fishing pressure has eased over that same period, with little effect.

Chinook have declined 10 per cent in length and at least 25 per cent in weight, which is likely affecting their ability to reproduce. Smaller fish are less attractive to the resident killer whales, which typically do not eat chinook until they are at least 63 centimetres (25 inches).

“Killer whales don’t show a lot of interest in chinook until they reach a certain size, and then they focus intensely on those individuals,” said Ohlberger.

Both chinook salmon and resident killer whales have been the target of intensive conservation measures, but the success of the northern orcas appears to be coming at the expense of chinook and southern residents.

Eleven B.C. chinook stocks are considered endangered or threatened.

“We can’t expect every species to be abundant; there are limits and trade-offs,” he said. “These are ecosystems that are in flux and things are going up and down all the time, even without human influences.”

The recovery of seal and sea lion populations in the Salish Sea has also been implicated in the general decline of the chinook populations.

However, in the UW analysis, most arrows point to the northern residents.

“Most of the discussion about the southern residents in Vancouver and Seattle almost pretends that they exist in their own universe,” said Schindler. “In fact, they are competing (for food) with whales elsewhere that are doing really well, with incredibly high population growth rates.”

Taking a wider view of the northern Pacific, orcas are thriving, he said.

“There are more orcas out there now than there have been in decades,” he said. “The southern residents could be suffering from competition or changes to their environment.”

 
Resurgence of an apex marine predator and the decline in prey body size

https://www.pnas.org/content/early/2019/12/10/1910930116


" Because of declines in fisheries’ harvests since the 1980s, these consumption levels by killer whales now exceed the combined annual removals of Chinook salmon by commercial, recreational, and subsistence fisheries (23)."
 
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We need have a possible cull of Northern Residents and definitely a cull of the Alaskan residents!:eek:

I like the last couple lines of the article best "Taking a wider view of the northern Pacific, orcas are thriving, he said. “There are more orcas out there now than there have been in decades,” he said. “The southern residents could be suffering from competition or changes to their environment.”

I am sure David Suzuki and Misty McDuffee are shedding tears when they read this!:rolleyes: No more raking in donations, when its just thriving unless you throw out more BS, which I am sure they will.:mad:
 
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Shocking eh? What a surprise that the average body size of Chinook has been declining over past decade. All those fanciful theories about humans being the sole cause of SRKW decline. Time for a reset, and consider the broader ecosystem challenges.

It's actually extremely grim for us if indeed the NRKW are a leading factor because let's be honest we are not going to cull KW ever. It also explains why stocks that stay local are generally doing better. As well as stocks down in California are doing well that stay down their.

We know how the ENGO's will read this report tho, They will say this is why fishing needs to be stopped because the NRKW are running out of big chinook too and if we dont stop now then they will be next.
 
We have known the NRKW's have been doing great for a long time. They seem to be genetically superior and more adaptable from an evolutionary perspective compared to the SRKW's. From what I have read that while they do eat a lot of Chinook, they have also been know to eat other species such as Halibut. I understand there range is slowly expanding South as their populations grow and that while they have some range that overlaps with the SRKW's they are generally not seen in the same area at the same time. I am thinking the two groups may be tribal and not tolerant of each other and the SRKW's, which are far less in numbers and less robust, are smart enough to run away south when the northern Orca are around. One wonders if nature has selected the SRKW's for extinction as has happened with countless species over time as they seem to be more highly specialized and less adaptable than the NRKW's. There is no planning in evolution, just the survival of the fittest and most adaptable. It is possible that after the extinction of the SRKW's or the few that remain are pushed way south past Washington, that the NRKW's with their increasing numbers and expanding range will replace them in JDF and the Salish Sea. That kind of thing has happened countless times in nature.
 
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We have known the NRKW's have been doing great for a long time. They seem to be genetically superior and more adaptable from an evolutionary perspective compared to the SRKW's. From what I have read that while they do eat a lot of Chinook, they have also been know to eat other species such as Halibut. I understand there range is slowly expanding South as their populations grow and that while they have some range that overlaps with the SRKW's they are generally not seen in the same area at the same time. I am thinking the two groups may be tribal and not tolerant of each other and the SRKW's, which are far less in numbers and less robust, are smart enough to run away south when the northern Orca are around. One wonders if nature has selected the SRKW's for extinction as has happened with countless species over time as they seem to be more highly specialized and less adaptable than the NRKW's. There is no planning in evolution, just the survival of the fittest and most adaptable. It is possible that after the extinction of the SRKW's or the few that remain are pushed way south past Washington, that the NRKW's with their increasing numbers and expanding range will replace them in JDF and the Salish Sea. That kind of thing has happened countless times in nature.
We also have a thriving Transient Orca population in our waters and there is some theory that SKRW don't like mingling with them as well.
 
"Fishing pressure has eased over that same period, with little effect."

That factual statement should be repeated and repeated until it is burned into the public's memory.

We still don't know how much damage Alaskan salmon ranching is doing. Not only could the hatchery pinks be eating the food of the chinook but the pinks might also allow the NRKW to exceed their historical population by providing a stable backup food supply..
 
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