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Spatial estimates of juvenile Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.) abundance in the Strait of Georgia

Description:

Spatial information on the distribution of juvenile Pacific salmon is needed to support Marine Spatial Planning in the Pacific Region of Canada. Here we provide spatial estimates of the distribution of juvenile fish in the Strait of Georgia for all five species of Pacific salmon. These estimates were generated using a spatiotemporal generalized linear model and are based on standardized fishery-independent survey data from the Strait of Georgia mid-water juvenile salmon mid-water trawl survey from 2010 to 2020. We provide predicted catch per unit effort (CPUE), year-to-year variation in CPUE, and prediction uncertainty for both summer (June–July) and fall (September–October) at a 0.5 km resolution, covering the majority of the strait. These results show that the surface 75 m of the entire Strait of Georgia is habitat for juvenile salmon from June through early October, but that distributions within the strait differ across species and across seasons. While there is interannual variability in abundances and distributions, our analysis identifies areas that have consistently high abundances across years. The results from this study illustrate juvenile habitat use in the Strait of Georgia for the five species of Pacific salmon and can support ongoing marine spatial planning initiatives in the Pacific region of Canada.

Methods:

Juvenile Salmon Survey Data

This analysis is based on surveys conducted between 2010 and 2020. Sets that lasted between 12 and 50 minutes and at depths less than or equal to 60 m (head rope depth) were included. The resulting survey dataset consists of 1588 sets. The analysis included all five species of Pacific salmon. For pink salmon, only even year surveys were included as they have a two-year life cycle and are effectively absent from the Strait in odd years.

Geostatistical model of salmon abundance and Predictions

We estimated the spatial distribution and abundance of each species of Pacific Salmon using geostatistical models fit with sdmTMB (Anderson et al. 2022). For each species, we modelled the number of individuals caught in a set, at a location and time using a negative binomial observation model with a log link. Predictions were made for each survey season (summer and fall) in each year from 2010 to 2020 over a 500 m by 500 m grid based on a 3 km buffer around the outer concave hull of the trawl coordinates. The concave hull was calculated using the ‘sf_concave_hull’ function from the sf package using a concavity ratio of 0.3, and excluding holes. Predictions were made as catch per unit effort (CPUE, for 60 minutes) for tows conducted in the surface waters (i.e., head rope at 0 m). Continuous estimates are provided at a 0.5 km resolution throughout the Strait of Georgia. These estimates consist of 1) mean catch per unit effort (CPUE), 2) year-to-year coefficient of variation (CV) of CPUE as a measure of the temporal variability, 3) binned biscale measures of mean vs. CV of CPUE to distinguish areas where abundance is consistently high vs. areas where it is high on average, but with high year-to-year variability, and 4) mean standard error in CPUE as a measure of uncertainty.

See Thompson and Neville for full method details.

Uncertainties:

Although the models had relatively low uncertainty and the estimated spatial patterns reflected the spatial and temporal variation in CPUE in the surveys, it is important to understand the limitations of these model predictions. Because juvenile salmon are often aggregated, there is high variability in the CPUE in the survey data. Our model predictions represent the geometric mean CPUE and so are an average expectation, but do not reproduce the high inter-tow variability that is present in the survey data. Spatially, our predictions have low uncertainty in areas that are central within the standard survey track line. However, uncertainty is higher on the margins of the survey area, where there are fewer sets to inform those predictions.

Data Sources:

Juvenile salmon survey database from Salmon Marine Interactions Program, REEFF, ESD, Pacific Biological Station.

Data is also available through Canadian Data Report of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences publications.

Simple

Date ( RI_367 )
2025-01-24
Date ( RI_366 )
2024-12-09
RI_415
  Government of Canada; Fisheries and Oceans Canada; Pacific Science/Ecosystem Science Division/Marine Spatial Ecology & Analysis Section - Patrick Thompson ( Research Biologist )
4160 Marine Drive , West Vancouver , British Columbia , V7V 1H2 , Canada
604-999-3490
https://www.gis-hub.ca/dataset/juvenile-salmon-abundance
RI_414
  Government of Canada; Fisheries and Oceans Canada; Ecosystems and Ocean Science/Pacific Science/Ecosystems Science Division - Chrys Neville ( Research Biologist )
Pacific Biological Station, 3190 Hammond Bay Road , Nanaimo , British Columbia , V9T 6N7 , Canada
250-756-7185
Status
completed; complété RI_593
Maintenance and update frequency
notPlanned; nonPlanifié RI_542
Keywords ( RI_528 )
  • anadromous
  • geostatistical models
  • juvenile pacific salmon
  • marine spatial planning
  • catch per unit effort (cpue)
Keywords ( RI_525 )
  • Pacific region
  • strait of Georgia
Government of Canada Core Subject Thesaurus Thésaurus des sujets de base du gouvernement du Canada ( RI_528 )
  • Salt water fish
  • Environmental management
  • Aquatic ecosystems
Use limitation
Open Government Licence - Canada (http://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada)
Access constraints
license; licence RI_606
Use constraints
license; licence RI_606
Spatial representation type
vector; vecteur RI_635
Metadata language
eng; CAN
Character set
utf8; utf8 RI_458
Topic category
  • Biota
Begin date
2010-10-01
End date
2020-12-31
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S
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Supplemental Information

Juvenile Salmon Survey Data

This analysis is based on surveys conducted between 2010 and 2020. Sets that lasted between 12 and 50 minutes and at depths less than or equal to 60 m (head rope depth) were included. The resulting survey dataset consists of 1588 sets. The analysis included all five species of Pacific salmon. For pink salmon, only even year surveys were included as they have a two-year life cycle and are effectively absent from the Strait in odd years.

Geostatistical model of salmon abundance and Predictions

We estimated the spatial distribution and abundance of each species of Pacific Salmon using geostatistical models fit with sdmTMB (Anderson et al. 2022). For each species, we modelled the number of individuals caught in a set, at a location and time using a negative binomial observation model with a log link.

Predictions were made for each survey season (summer and fall) in each year from 2010 to 2020 over a 500 m by 500 m grid based on a 3 km buffer around the outer concave hull of the trawl coordinates. The concave hull was calculated using the ‘sf_concave_hull’ function from the sf package using a concavity ratio of 0.3, and excluding holes. Predictions were made as catch per unit effort (CPUE, for 60 minutes) for tows conducted in the surface waters (i.e., head rope at 0 m). Continuous estimates are provided at a 0.5 km resolution throughout the Strait of Georgia. These estimates consist of 1) mean catch per unit effort (CPUE), 2) year-to-year coefficient of variation (CV) of CPUE as a measure of the temporal variability, 3) binned biscale measures of mean vs. CV of CPUE to distinguish areas where abundance is consistently high vs. areas where it is high on average, but with high year-to-year variability, and 4) mean standard error in CPUE as a measure of uncertainty.

See Thompson and Neville for full method details.

Reference system identifier
https://epsg.io / EPSG:4326 /
Distribution format
  • TIFF ( unknown )

  • CSV ( unknown )

RI_412
  Government of Canada; Fisheries and Oceans Canada; Pacific Science/Ecosystem Science Division/Marine Spatial Ecology and Analysis Section - Kayleigh Gillespie ( Spatial Data Steward )
Pacific Biological Station, 3190 Hammond Bay Road , Nanaimo , British Columbia , V9T 6N7 , Canada
250-756-7202
https://www.gis-hub.ca/dataset/juvenile-salmon-abundance
OnLine resource
Spatial estimates of juvenile Pacific salmon abundance in the Strait of Georgia ( HTTPS )

Dataset;TIFF;eng

OnLine resource
Data Dictionary ( HTTPS )

Supporting Document;CSV;eng

OnLine resource
Data Dictionary French ( HTTPS )

Supporting Document;CSV;fra

OnLine resource
Canadian Technical Report of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 3597 ( HTTPS )

Supporting Document;PDF;eng

OnLine resource
Spatial estimates of juvenile Pacific salmon abundance in the Strait of Georgia ( ESRI REST: Map Service )

Web Service;ESRI REST;eng

OnLine resource
Spatial estimates of juvenile Pacific salmon abundance in the Strait of Georgia ( ESRI REST: Map Service )

Web Service;ESRI REST;fra

File identifier
46902cbc-4bc2-40f5-bd02-b0111bd2818f XML
Metadata language
eng; CAN
Character set
utf8; utf8 RI_458
Hierarchy level
dataset; jeuDonnées RI_622
Date stamp
2025-01-27T16:31:38.929Z
Metadata standard name
North American Profile of ISO 19115:2003 - Geographic information - Metadata
Metadata standard version
CAN/CGSB-171.100-2009
RI_414
  Government of Canada; Fisheries and Oceans Canada; Ecosystems and Ocean Science/Pacific Science/Ecosystem Science Division/Marine Spatial Ecology and Analysis Section - Patrick Thompson ( Research Biologist )
4160 Marine Drive , West Vancouver , British Columbia , V7V 1H2 , Canada
604-999-3490
https://www.gis-hub.ca/dataset/juvenile-salmon-abundance
 
 

Overviews

overview
Juvenile_Salmon_Mean CPUE

Spatial extent

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Keywords


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Associated resources

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