Trends in wild adult steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss)
abundance in British Columbia as indexed by angler success
Barry D. Smith, Bruce R. Ward, and David W. Welch
Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci./J. Can. Sci. Halieut. Aquat. 57(2): 225-270 (2000)
Abstract: Intraregional similarities and interregional differences in
wild steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss) abundance trends over time
throughout British Columbia were identified using catch-per-angler-day (CpAD)
as an index of abundance. This index was calculated using sport angler catch
and effort data obtained by an ongoing mail-out questionnaire begun in the
fiscal year 1967-1968. Despite high interannual variability in CpAD for
individual rivers, its validity as an index of trends over time in wild
steelhead abundance for geographic regions or watersheds is reinforced by
similar trends yielded by both fishery-dependent and fishery-independent data.
Time series methods generally could not build statistical support for the
hypotheses that sudden regulation changes, or the gradual introduction over
time of a catch and release philosophy, are generally important factors
affecting trends over time in CpAD. This bolsters our confidence that the
general patterns in mean CpAD over time within regions and watersheds
reasonably index actual wild adult in-river steelhead abundance. We propose
that the trends that we observe in wild steelhead CpAD are primarily driven by
environmental influences. Some candidate environmental time series currently
being considered and investigated are coastal upwelling, various ocean and atmospheric
climate indices, freshwater discharge histories, and ultraviolet radiation.