Walter H. PearsonRichard’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Fig. 1 Herring biomass indices for Prince William Sound by calendar year. Data from: ADFG (unpublished data, See Appendix), Ashe et al. (2005), Donaldson et al. (1993), Moffitt (2006)
Fig. 2 Number of age-3 herring recruits for Prince William Sound and Sitka, Alaska, estimated by ADFG ASA models by calendar year (Dressel 2006, Moffitt 2006)
Table 2 List of hypotheses concerning the decline of PWS herring and subsequent poor recovery
Table 3 continued
Table 5 Prevalence of Ichthyophonus hoferi in PWS Pacific herring samples and mean age of fish sampled

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Hypotheses concerning the decline and poor recovery of Pacific herring in Prince William Sound, Alaska
  • Article
  • Full-text available

March 2012

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323 Reads

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51 Citations

Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries

Walter H. PearsonRichard

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Richard B. Deriso

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Ralph A. Elston

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[...]

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Jack W. Anderson

This paper updates previous reviews of the 1993 stock decline of Pacific herring (Clupea pallasi) in Prince William Sound, Alaska, and focuses on hypotheses about subsequent poor recovery. Recent age structured assessment modeling with covariate analysis indicates that the population dynamics of the sound’s herring are influenced by oceanic factors, nutrition, and, most substantially, hatchery releases of juvenile pink salmon. For the 1993 decline, poor nutrition remains the most probable cause with disease a secondary response. Concerning poor recovery, we examined 16 potential factors and found three to be causal: oceanic factors, poor nutrition, and hatchery releases of juvenile pink salmon. Absences of strong year classes at both Sitka and Prince William Sound after 1993 indicate the action of large-scale ocean processes. Beyond regional-scale environmental factors, two factors specific to the sound influence the population dynamics of herring and are likely impeding recovery. First, pink salmon fry releases have increased to about 600 million annually and may disrupt feeding in young herring, which require adequate nutrition for growth and overwintering survival. Juvenile pink salmon and age-1 herring co-occur in nearshore areas of bays in late spring and summer, and available data on dietary overlap indicates potential competition between the age-1 juvenile herring and juvenile pink salmon. Field studies demonstrate that juvenile herring reduce food intake substantially in the presence of juvenile pink salmon. Second, overwintering humpback whales may consume potentially large amounts of adult herring, but further studies must confirm to what extent whale predation reduces herring biomass.

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Citations (1)


... In addition to potential future earthquakes and oil spills, researchers in 2020 warned that a 1.6-km-long slope with the potential to release roughly 500 million m 3 of material into the Barry Arm Fjord in Prince William Sound would likely trigger a catastrophic tsunami within the next two decades and possibly even within the next 12 months (Dai et al. 2020). (Pearson et al. 2012). The herring is a keystone species with cascading effects on the marine food web as well as a significant commercial and subsistence resource (Ward et al. 2019). ...

Reference:

Pacific Northwest Research Station | General Vulnerability of Alaska Native Tribes in the Chugach Region to Selected Climate and Nonclimate Stressors
Hypotheses concerning the decline and poor recovery of Pacific herring in Prince William Sound, Alaska

Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries