Fish Focus

FISH DISTRIBUTION AND ABUNDANCE CHANGES IN EASTERN BERING SEA

Fish distribution and abundance changes in eastern Bering Sea. Pelagic or forage fish species are an important source of food for marine predators in the eastern Bering Sea. This group of fish includes capelin, Pacific herring, juvenile chum salmon, juvenile pink salmon, juvenile sockeye salmon, and walleye pollock during their first year of life.

A new study by scientists at the Alaska Fisheries Science Centre shows variable effects on species distribution and abundance. It looked at several warm periods from 2002–2018 when ocean temperatures were warmer than average for four or more consecutive years.

Previous studies by NOAA Fisheries documented a northward shift in age-0 pollock, juvenile salmon, herring, and capelin during the 2002-2005 warm period relative to the 2006-2011 cool period in the eastern Bering Sea.

“However, this is the first study to look at temperature-related changes in the distribution and biomass (total average weight of all fish) of pelagic fishes over multiple warm periods,” said Ellen Yasumiishi, researcher, Alaska Fisheries Science Centre and lead author for the study. “Studies like this are also important for understanding factors that may affect juvenile salmon and age-0 pollock growth, development and ability to reach maturity. As adults these fish are targeted by commercial, recreational, and subsistence fisheries in Alaska.”

During late summer from 2002–2018, scientists collected juvenile and small fishes using surface trawl nets and measured sea surface temperatures in the eastern Bering Sea. Summer sea surface temperatures were relatively warm from 2002 to 2005, cool from 2006 to 2013 (with the exception of 2007), and warm again in 2014 to 2018.

The general distribution and biomass of the six pelagic fish species in the study varied over time and space across the eastern Bering Sea shelf from 2002–2018. Yasumiishi and colleagues found that ocean surface warming corresponded with

Source and photo: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/feature-story/distribution-and-abundance-forage-fish-arctic-and-sub-arctic-waters-affected-warming