Marine Migration of North American Green Sturgeon

  • Lindley S
  • Moser M
  • Erickson D
  • et al.
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Abstract

An understanding of the distribution of North American green sturgeon Acipenser medirostris in coastal waters is crucial to minimize impacts on this vulnerable species from various fisheries. To determine migratory patterns, we tagged 213 subadult and adult green sturgeon in spawning rivers and summer aggregation areas with uniquely coded ultrasonic pingers and observed their coastal movements with arrays of automated hydrophones deployed along the West Coast of North America from southeast Alaska to Monterey Bay, California. Green sturgeon exhibited an annual migration along the continental shelf from U.S. to Canadian waters in the fall and an apparent return migration in the spring. Peak migration rates exceeded 50 km/d during the springtime southward migration. Large numbers of green sturgeon were detected near Brooks Peninsula on northwest Vancouver Island, British Columbia, during May‐June and October‐November. A single fish was detected in southeast Alaska in December. This pattern of detections suggests that important overwintering grounds may be north of Vancouver Island and south of Cape Spencer, Alaska. A high frequency of detection allowed us to estimate that annual survival of tagged green sturgeon was 0.83 in 2004. The rapid, frequent long‐distance migrations by these fish may make them vulnerable to bycatch in bottom trawl fisheries on the shelf waters of western North America.

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Lindley, S. T., Moser, M. L., Erickson, D. L., Belchik, M., Welch, D. W., Rechisky, E. L., … Klimley, A. P. (2008). Marine Migration of North American Green Sturgeon. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society, 137(1), 182–194. https://doi.org/10.1577/t07-055.1

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