A juvenile chinook salmon rests in the hand of a researcher, collected as part of Lopez-based Kwiaht
Courtesy of Kwiáht
A juvenile chinook salmon rests in the hand of a researcher, collected as part of Lopez-based Kwiaht's study of 'Blackmouth' salmon in the San Juan Islands.

Kwiaht seeks anglers' help in solving 'Blackmouth' mystery


January 22, 2013 · 9:52 AM

Every summer, hundreds of thousands of juvenile Chinook salmon visit San Juan County on their way to the ocean, feasting on the islands’ herring, sandlance, larval crabs and insects.

Why do some of these fish remain in the islands and become “Blackmouth,” a critical resource for recreational anglers?

Although it is Washington state policy to use hatcheries to increase the supply of Blackmouth for anglers, and most of the Blackmouth caught today began life in a hatchery, there is no simple genetic basis for this lifestyle choice by individual salmon. Some clues have been discovered by a long-term salmon food-web study by the Lopez-based conservation laboratory Kwiáht, which just issued a report summarizing five years of research sampling over two thousand juvenile Chinook in the islands’ nearshore waters.

On the whole, says Kwiáht director Russel Barsh, juvenile Chinook prefer to eat oily herring or sandlance, but about one in six juvenile Chinook prefers insects and other invertebrates even when baitfish are plentiful. Both wild and hatchery Chinook exhibit this behavior.

Biologists call this a “portfolio strategy” and believe that it makes efficient use of all available resources. The Kwiáht team has discovered that juvenile Chinook leave the islands quickly after a few calorie-rich meals of herring or sandlance, but stay in the islands for weeks or months if they are eating crustaceans or insects.

“Fishy years should produce very few Blackmouth,” Barsh says, “but there will always be at least some Blackmouth because of individual food preferences at this stage in Chinook life histories.”

Barsh adds that there is some evidence for a genetic basis for food preferences in salmon, but preferences may also be learned. Kwiáht scientists need the help of local anglers to learn more about the biology of the islands’ Blackmouth.

If you catch and keep a Blackmouth this winter, set aside a tail fin clipping the size of a dime and freeze it in a plastic sandwich bag. If possible save the gut contents as well in a separate plastic bag, place it inside the bag with the fin clip, and freeze them all together. Frozen fin clips and gut contents can be dropped off at Kings Marine.

The DNA in the fin clip can be compared with DNA from the thousands of fish already sampled as juveniles by Kwiáht scientists and volunteers, and the gut contents of course will identify the resources that Blackmouth rely on as adults. The Blackmouth study is co-sponsored by the Wild Fish Conservancy and Long Live the Kings, Barsh says, with the generous cooperation of Kings Marine.

For further information contact: kwiaht@gmail.com

— Editor's note: the article above was submitted as a press release to the Journal by Kwiaht

 

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