Listen Live

Pink salmon hatcheries, climate change harming other species: study

Pink salmon hatchery programs have been so successful, they are harming other species, says new research.

Scientists from Vancouver Island, Alaska, and Washington State recently published a research article looking at the impacts of pink salmon on the North Pacific. They found there are so many pinks in the ocean they are affecting multiple species from microscopic organisms to killer whales.

Pink salmon abundance has more than doubled since the mid-1970s, thanks to climate change and industrial hatchery programs in Alaska and Russia. Now, they are out-competing other salmon for food. While Chinook salmon decline because of lack of food, so do the endangered Southern Resident Killer Whales which eat Chinooks exclusively.

The research article, titled “From diatoms to killer whales: impacts of pink salmon on North Pacific ecosystems,” predicts the trend will continue while oceans continue warming, and as long as hatchery programs continue at current volumes.

It was published Sept. 21 in Marine Ecology Progress Series.

Continue Reading

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Province rolls out updated flu and COVID-19 vaccines for fall

B.C. officials say it’s time to roll up your...

B.C. attorney general welcomes proposed federal bail reforms targeting repeat violent offenders

B.C. Attorney General Niki Sharma said proposed changes to...

Update: Eight airlifted to safety in joint rescue after being stranded near San Josef Bay

DriveBC says Holberg Road outside of Port Hardy is closed due to a landslide.

BCGEU says mediation talks progressing as strike impacts widen across B.C.

The B.C. General Employees Union (BCGEU) said Thursday progress...

BC. Conversative management committee says Rustad should step down as leader

The B.C. Conservative Party's management committee says the party is in turmoil and is calling on John Rustad to immediately step down as leader.
- Advertisement -