Abstract

AbstractThe Alaska salmon hatchery program is intended to supplement salmon fisheries without supplanting wild stocks. Hatchery‐origin Chum Salmon Oncorhynchus keta spend most of their lives interacting with wild salmon, including some degree of straying to spawning streams. Our study was designed and implemented to measure the extent and annual variability of straying by hatchery‐produced, summer‐run Chum Salmon in Southeast Alaska from 2013 to 2015 by sampling in individual streams to estimate the proportion of hatchery strays. In the sampled index streams, the proportion ranged from 0.000 to 0.854 over the 3 years. Unbiased estimates of the proportions of hatchery‐origin fish spawning in each of the three management units ranged from 0.016 to 0.081, and the estimated hatchery proportions spawning across Southeast Alaska ranged from 0.032 to 0.060. The proportion of hatchery strays decreased as the distance from hatchery release sites increased; proportions were highest at streams located within 50 km of the nearest release site. The proportion of hatchery‐origin spawners was negatively related to the index of spawning escapement in a stream. A hatchery donor stray rate of 0.8–4.8% was estimated. Hatchery‐origin Chum Salmon occur at low levels in most Chum Salmon systems in Southeast Alaska and at higher levels in systems close to hatchery release sites.

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