Abstract

AbstractWe quantified the percentage of PIT‐tagged subyearling fall Chinook Salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha that were consumed by Caspian terns Hydroprogne caspia and double‐crested cormorants Phalacrocorax auritus nesting on East Sand Island in the Columbia River estuary by electronically recovering PIT tags that were deposited on the bird colonies. We released 23 groups of PIT‐tagged subyearling fall Chinook Salmon from hatcheries in the lower Columbia River downstream of Bonneville Dam from 2002 to 2010. Vulnerability to avian predation was compared between PIT‐tagged subyearlings of two Columbia River basin stocks: tule and upriver bright (URB). Recoveries of PIT tags revealed that overall predation rates were significantly different between the tule stock (22%) and URB stock (3%); for fish that were detected as entering the lower Columbia River during the same week, predation rates also differed between stocks (tule: 21%; URB: 2%). Minimum predation rates on tule subyearlings originating from hatcheries downstream of Bonneville Dam were among the highest documented for any salmonid species in the Columbia River basin to date, occasionally exceeding 35% of the available fish. The ratio of URB fish consumed by the two avian predators indicated that the percentages were nearly equal (cormorant [%]: tern [%] = 51:49), whereas the ratio for tule‐stock fish consumed by the two avian species was not uniform (cormorant: tern = 81:19). Differences in predation rates between the tule stock and the URB stock may be attributable to migration behaviors exhibited in the estuary. We estimate that more than 8 million tule fall Chinook Salmon subyearlings released from hatcheries annually are consumed by double‐crested cormorants and Caspian terns nesting on East Sand Island; ongoing management actions by multiple federal, state, and tribal governments, if successful, will decrease predation on fall Chinook Salmon stocks.

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