Climate Change: 1998
Publications
Author: Welch,
D.W., Ishida, Y., and Nagasawa, K.
Title: Thermal limits and ocean migrations of
sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka): long-term consequences
of global warming.
Publication: Canadian Journal of Fisheries and
Aquatic Sciences 55(4): 937-948, 1998.
© National Research Council Canada
Notes: Ocean surveys
show that extremely sharp thermal boundaries have limited the
distribution of sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) in the
Pacific Ocean and adjacent seas over the past 40 years. These
limits are expressed as a step function, with the temperature
defining the position of the thermal limit varying between months
in an annual cycle. The sharpness of the edge, the different
temperatures that define the position of the edge in different
months of the year, and the subtle variations in temperature with
area or decade for a given month probably all occur because
temperature-dependent metabolic rates exceed energy intake from
feeding over large regions of otherwise acceptable habitat in the
North Pacific. At current rates of greenhouse gas emissions,
predicted temperature increases under a doubled CO2 climate are
large enough to shift the position of the thermal limits into the
Bering Sea by the middle of the next century. Such an increase
would potentially exclude sockeye salmon from the entire Pacific
Ocean and severely restrict the overall area of the marine
environment that would support growth.
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