Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Erin L. Rechisky is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Erin L. Rechisky.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

In situ measurement of coastal ocean movements and survival of juvenile Pacific salmon.

David W. Welch; Michael C. Melnychuk; John Payne; Erin L. Rechisky; Aswea D. Porter; George D. Jackson; Bruce Ward; Stephen P. Vincent; Chris C. Wood; Jayson M. Semmens

Many salmon populations in both the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans have experienced sharply decreasing returns and high ocean mortality in the past two decades, with some populations facing extirpation if current marine survival trends continue. Our inability to monitor the movements of marine fish or to directly measure their survival precludes experimental tests of theories concerning the factors regulating fish populations, and thus limits scientific advance in many aspects of fisheries management and conservation. Here we report a large-scale synthesis of survival and movement rates of free-ranging juvenile salmon across four species, 13 river watersheds, and 44 release groups of salmon smolts (>3,500 fish tagged in total) in rivers and coastal ocean waters, including an assessment of where mortality predominantly occurs during the juvenile migration. Of particular importance, our data indicate that, over the size range of smolts tagged, (i) smolt survival was not strongly related to size at release, (ii) tag burden did not appear to strongly reduce the survival of smaller animals, and (iii) for at least some populations, substantial mortality occurred much later in the migration and more distant from the river of origin than generally expected. Our findings thus have implications for determining where effort should be invested to improve the accuracy of salmon forecasting, to understand the mechanisms driving salmon declines, and to predict the impact of climate change on salmon stocks.


PLOS Biology | 2008

Survival of migrating salmon smolts in large rivers with and without dams.

David W. Welch; Erin L. Rechisky; Michael C. Melnychuk; Aswea D. Porter; Carl J. Walters; Shaun Clements; Benjamin J. Clemens; R. Scott McKinley; Carl B. Schreck

The mortality of salmon smolts during their migration out of freshwater and into the ocean has been difficult to measure. In the Columbia River, which has an extensive network of hydroelectric dams, the decline in abundance of adult salmon returning from the ocean since the late 1970s has been ascribed in large measure to the presence of the dams, although the completion of the hydropower system occurred at the same time as large-scale shifts in ocean climate, as measured by climate indices such as the Pacific Decadal Oscillation. We measured the survival of salmon smolts during their migration to sea using elements of the large-scale acoustic telemetry system, the Pacific Ocean Shelf Tracking (POST) array. Survival measurements using acoustic tags were comparable to those obtained independently using the Passive Integrated Transponder (PIT) tag system, which is operational at Columbia and Snake River dams. Because the technology underlying the POST array works in both freshwater and the ocean, it is therefore possible to extend the measurement of survival to large rivers lacking dams, such as the Fraser, and to also extend the measurement of survival to the lower Columbia River and estuary, where there are no dams. Of particular note, survival during the downstream migration of at least some endangered Columbia and Snake River Chinook and steelhead stocks appears to be as high or higher than that of the same species migrating out of the Fraser River in Canada, which lacks dams. Equally surprising, smolt survival during migration through the hydrosystem, when scaled by either the time or distance migrated, is higher than in the lower Columbia River and estuary where dams are absent. Our results raise important questions regarding the factors that are preventing the recovery of salmon stocks in the Columbia and the future health of stocks in the Fraser River.


Transactions of The American Fisheries Society | 2008

Marine Migration of North American Green Sturgeon

Steven T. Lindley; Mary L. Moser; Daniel L. Erickson; Michael Belchik; David W. Welch; Erin L. Rechisky; John T. Kelly; Joseph C. Heublein; A. Peter Klimley

Abstract An understanding of the distribution of North American green sturgeon Acipenser medirostris in coastal waters is crucial to minimize impacts on this vulnerable species from various fisheries. To determine migratory patterns, we tagged 213 subadult and adult green sturgeon in spawning rivers and summer aggregation areas with uniquely coded ultrasonic pingers and observed their coastal movements with arrays of automated hydrophones deployed along the West Coast of North America from southeast Alaska to Monterey Bay, California. Green sturgeon exhibited an annual migration along the continental shelf from U.S. to Canadian waters in the fall and an apparent return migration in the spring. Peak migration rates exceeded 50 km/d during the springtime southward migration. Large numbers of green sturgeon were detected near Brooks Peninsula on northwest Vancouver Island, British Columbia, during May-June and October-November. A single fish was detected in southeast Alaska in December. This pattern of detec...


Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences | 2009

Experimental measurement of hydrosystem-induced delayed mortality in juvenile Snake River spring Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) using a large-scale acoustic array.

Erin L. Rechisky; David W. Welch; Aswea D. Porter; Melinda C. Jacobs; AdrianLadouceurA. Ladouceur

Out-migrating Snake River salmon smolts must pass eight major hydro dams before reaching the Pacific Ocean. Direct mortality at the dams is generally low; however, the cumulative stress caused by dam passage is hypothesized to re- sult in delayed mortality, which occurs beyond the impounded section of the river. We tested the delayed mortality hy- pothesis by comparing in-river and early ocean survival of hatchery-origin spring Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) from the Snake River to a mid-Columbia River population that passes through only four dams and has higher smolt to adult return rates. Smolts >140 mm fork length were implanted with acoustic transmitters and tracked with the Pacific Ocean Shelf Tracking (POST) array to as far as Alaska. There was no detectable difference in survivorship to the first ocean detection line, 274 km beyond the final dam (SSnake = 29% ± 4%, SYakima = 28% ± 5%), indicating that the sur- vival disparity observed in adult return rates may develop later in the marine life history phase. Our study is the first to es- timate survival in the coastal ocean and demonstrates the utility of a large-scale array in testing previously intractable hypotheses.


Molecular Ecology | 2014

Immune response genes and pathogen presence predict migration survival in wild salmon smolts

Ken M. Jeffries; Scott G. Hinch; Marika K. Gale; Timothy D. Clark; Andrew G. Lotto; Matthew T. Casselman; Shaorong Li; Erin L. Rechisky; Aswea D. Porter; David W. Welch; Kristina M. Miller

We present the first data to link physiological responses and pathogen presence with subsequent fate during migration of wild salmonid smolts. We tagged and non‐lethally sampled gill tissue from sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) smolts as they left their nursery lake (Chilko Lake, BC, Canada) to compare gene expression profiles and freshwater pathogen loads with migration success over the first ~1150 km of their migration to the North Pacific Ocean using acoustic telemetry. Fifteen per cent of smolts were never detected again after release, and these fish had gene expression profiles consistent with an immune response to one or more viral pathogens compared with fish that survived their freshwater migration. Among the significantly upregulated genes of the fish that were never detected postrelease were MX (interferon‐induced GTP‐binding protein Mx) and STAT1 (signal transducer and activator of transcription 1‐alpha/beta), which are characteristic of a type I interferon response to viral pathogens. The most commonly detected pathogen in the smolts leaving the nursery lake was infectious haematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV). Collectively, these data show that some of the fish assumed to have died after leaving the nursery lake appeared to be responding to one or more viral pathogens and had elevated stress levels that could have contributed to some of the mortality shortly after release. We present the first evidence that changes in gene expression may be predictive of some of the freshwater migration mortality in wild salmonid smolts.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Influence of multiple dam passage on survival of juvenile Chinook salmon in the Columbia River estuary and coastal ocean

Erin L. Rechisky; David W. Welch; Aswea D. Porter; Melinda C. Jacobs-Scott; Paul Winchell

Multiple dam passage during seaward migration is thought to reduce the subsequent survival of Snake River Chinook salmon. This hypothesis developed because juvenile Chinook salmon from the Snake River, the Columbia River’s largest tributary, migrate >700 km through eight hydropower dams and have lower adult return rates than downstream populations that migrate through only 3 or 4 dams. Using a large-scale telemetry array, we tested whether survival of hatchery-reared juvenile Snake River spring Chinook salmon is reduced in the estuary and coastal ocean relative to a downstream, hatchery-reared population from the Yakima River. During the initial 750-km, 1-mo-long migration through the estuary and coastal ocean, we found no evidence of differential survival; therefore, poorer adult returns of Snake River Chinook may develop far from the Columbia River. Thus, hydrosystem mitigation efforts may be ineffective if differential mortality rates develop in the North Pacific Ocean for reasons unrelated to dam passage.


Ecological Applications | 2016

Tracking wild sockeye salmon smolts to the ocean reveals distinct regions of nocturnal movement and high mortality

Timothy D. Clark; Nathan B. Furey; Erin L. Rechisky; Marika K. Gale; Ken M. Jeffries; Aswea D. Porter; Matthew T. Casselman; Andrew G. Lotto; David Patterson; Steven J. Cooke; Anthony P. Farrell; David W. Welch; Scott G. Hinch

Few estimates of migration rates or descriptions of behavior or survival exist for wild populations of out-migrating Pacific salmon smolts from natal freshwater rearing areas to the ocean. Using acoustic transmitters and fixed receiver arrays across four years (2010-2013), we tracked the migration of > 1850 wild sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) smolts from Chilko Lake, British Columbia, to the coastal Pacific Ocean (> 1000 km distance). Cumulative survival to the ocean ranged 3-10% among years, although this may be slightly underestimated due to technical limitations at the final receiver array. Distinct spatial patterns in both behavior and survival were observed through all years. In small, clear, upper-river reaches, downstream migration largely occurred at night at speeds up to 50 km/d and coincided with poor survival. Among years, only 57-78% of smolts survived the first 80 km. Parallel laboratory experiments revealed excellent short-term survival and unhindered swimming performance of dummy-tagged smolts, suggesting that predators rather than tagging effects were responsible for the initial high mortality of acoustic-tagged smolts. Migration speeds increased in the Fraser River mainstem (~220 km/d in some years), diel movement patterns ceased, and smolt survival generally exceeded 90% in this segment. Marine movement rates and survival were variable across years, with among-year segment-specific survival being the most variable and lowest (19-61%) during the final (and longest, 240 km) marine migration segment. Osmoregulatory preparedness was not expected to influence marine survival, as smolts could maintain normal levels of plasma chloride when experimentally exposed to saltwater (30 ppt) immediately upon commencing their migration from Chilko Lake. Transportation of smolts downstream generally increased survival to the farthest marine array. The act of tagging may have affected smolts in the marine environment in some years as dummy-tagged fish had poorer survival than control fish when transitioned to saltwater in laboratory-based experiments. Current fisheries models for forecasting the number of adult sockeye returning to spawn have been inaccurate in recent years and generally do not incorporate juvenile or smolt survival information. Our results highlight significant potential for early migration conditions to influence adult recruitment.


Scientific Reports | 2012

Estuarine and early-marine survival of transported and in-river migrant Snake River spring Chinook salmon smolts

Erin L. Rechisky; David W. Welch; Aswea D. Porter; Melinda C. Jacobs-Scott; Paul Winchell; John L. McKern

Many juvenile Snake River Chinook salmon are transported downriver to avoid hydroelectric dams in the Columbia River basin. As mortality to the final dam is ∼50%, transported fish should return as adults at roughly double the rate of nontransported fish; however, the benefit of transportation has not been realized consistently. “Delayed” mortality caused by transportation-induced stress is one hypothesis to explain reduced returns of transported fish. Differential timing of ocean entry is another. We used a large-scale acoustic telemetry array to test whether survival of transported juvenile spring Chinook is reduced relative to in-river migrant control groups after synchronizing ocean entry timing. During the initial 750 km, 1 month long migration after release, we found no evidence of decreased estuarine or ocean survival of transported groups; therefore, decreased survival to adulthood for transported Chinook is likely caused by factors other than delayed effects of transportation, such as earlier ocean entry.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Reply to Haeseker: Value of controlled scientific experiments to resolve critical uncertainties regarding Snake River salmon survival

Erin L. Rechisky; David W. Welch; Aswea D. Porter

In our report (1), we set out to explicitly control for the ecological differences Haeseker (2) cites so that we could assess the effect of a critical policy issue: whether Snake River dam passage results in poorer early marine survival of juvenile Snake River spring Chinook salmon. Thus, we selected smolts of common size and manipulated release times to ensure smolts from the two populations were as similar as possible, apart from the number of dams that they passed (1). We agree with Haeseker that ecological differences between the populations used in our study existed and may have influenced ocean survival; however, their net effect needed to be a 3.4-fold difference in survival to result in the nearly identical rates of apparent survival that we found.


Oceanography | 2009

Advances in conservation oceanography: new tagging and tracking technologies and their potential for transforming the science underlying fisheries management

Charles H. Greene; Barbara A. Block; David W. Welch; George D. Jackson; Gareth L. Lawson; Erin L. Rechisky

Collaboration


Dive into the Erin L. Rechisky's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Scott G. Hinch

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nathan B. Furey

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrew G. Lotto

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Carl J. Walters

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kristina M. Miller

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marika K. Gale

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Matthew T. Casselman

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge