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Temperature, phenology, and embryo survival in western Alaska sockeye salmon population: the potential for adaptation to a warming world?

Dates

Creation
2014-06-01
Span of project activity
2014-06-01
Span of project activity
2016-12-31

Citation

LCC Network Data Steward(Point of Contact), Western Alaska Landscape Conservation Cooperative(administrator), University of Alaska, Fairbanks(Cooperator/Partner), Jeff Falke(Principal Investigator), Peter Westley(Principal Investigator), University of Washington(funder), Western Alaska Landscape Conservation Cooperative(funder), 2014-06-01(creation), Temperature, phenology, and embryo survival in western Alaska sockeye salmon population: the potential for adaptation to a warming world?, https://www.fws.gov/science/catalog, https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/5a0aebb8e4b09af898cb61d8

Summary

Viable sockeye salmon populations are critical to the economy, culture, and freshwater ecosystems of Bristol Bay in Western Alaska, and it is unclear how populations might respond to warming temperatures during the critical life history stages of spawning and embryo incubation. The overarching goal of the project is to understand how temperature might influence population-specific patterns of embryo incubation, timing of hatching and fry emergence, and sockeye salmon embryo survival. By combining analyses of data from two large lake systems in the Kvichak watershed, laboratory rearing experiments to elucidate functional relationships, and simulation modeling, this project quantifies biological responses to changing freshwater temperature [...]

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113.81 KB application/vnd.iso.19139-2+xml
metadata_iso1.xml 161.45 KB application/vnd.iso.19139-1+xml

Project Extension

parts
typeShort Project Description
valueBy combining analyses of data from two large lake systems in the Kvichak watershed, laboratory rearing experiments to elucidate functional relationships, and simulation modeling, this project quantifies biological responses to changing freshwater temperature in sockeye salmon in western Alaska.
projectStatusIn Progress

Budget Extension

annualBudgets
year2014
fundingSources
amount149995.0
recipientU.S. Geological Survey
sourceU.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
totalFunds149995.0
totalFunds149995.0

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
urn:uuid urn:uuid b313e93d-21b1-4f85-bb07-694f9a12c4a4
lcc:arctic lcc:arctic WA2014-38

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