Temperature, flow, and the migration of
adult sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) in the Columbia River
Thomas P. Quinn, Sayre Hodgson, and Charles Peven
Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci./J. Can. Sci. Halieut. Aquat. 54(6): 1349-1360 (1997)
Abstract: We related the arrival timing of adult sockeye
salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) at a series of dams on the Columbia River
(Bonneville, McNary, and Rock Island) and Snake River (Ice Harbor) to the
changing flow and temperature regimes over the last several decades. The
temperatures experienced by sockeye salmon have increased in the lower but not
upper reaches of the system, and the flows experienced by the fish have
decreased. The Bonneville-McNary travel rate increased from about 22 to 49
km/day, and sockeye salmon now pass McNary Dam about 11 days earlier than in
1954. Both travel rate and arrival date were correlated with temperature
increases and flow decreases at McNary during that period. Sockeye salmon
arrival at Rock Island Dam (14 days earlier from 1933 to 1994) was also
correlated with temperature and flow there. However, the travel rate between
McNary and Rock Island dams did not change from 1955 to 1994, despite a
decrease in estimated water velocity from 85 to 23 km/day. Sockeye salmon
arrival at Ice Harbor Dam has sometimes been bimodal; the first mode's date has
not changed, but annual mean dates have been positively correlated with flow
and negatively with temperature.