Millions of salmon disappear from Canadian river

WINNIPEG, Manitoba, (Reuters) – Millions of sockeye  salmon have disappeared mysteriously from a river on Canada’s  Pacific Coast that was once known as the world’s most fertile  spawning ground for sockeye.

Up to 10.6 million bright-red sockeye salmon were expected  to return to spawn this summer on the Fraser River, which  empties into the Pacific ocean near Vancouver, British  Columbia. The latest estimates say fewer than 1 million have  returned.

The Canadian government has closed the river to commercial  and recreational sockeye fishing for the third straight year,  hitting the livelihood of nearby Indian reserves.

“It’s quite the shocking drop,” said Stan Proboszcz,  fisheries biologist at the Watershed Watch Salmon Society. “No  one’s exactly sure what happened to these fish.”

Salmon are born in fresh water before migrating to oceans  to feed. They return as adults to the same rivers to spawn.

Several theories have been put forward to try to explain  the sockeye’s disappearance:
* Climate change may have reduced food supply for salmon in  the ocean.
* The commercial fish farms that the young Fraser River  salmon pass en route to the ocean may have infected them with  sea lice, a marine parasite.

* The rising temperature of the river may have weakened the  fish.
The Canadian government doesn’t know what’s killing the  fish, but believes the sockeye are dying off in the ocean, not  in fresh water, based on healthy out-migrations, said Jeff  Grout, regional resource manager of salmon for the Department  of Fisheries and Oceans.

It’s too soon to know yet how widespread salmon losses are  in the Pacific salmon fishery, but British Columbia’s northern  Skeena River has also seen lower-than-expected returns this  year, Grout said.