Several wild Babine sockeye stocks have been identified as a growing conservation concern.
This report examines the historical trends and current status of wild Babine sockeye returning to the Babine watershed in order to assess the overall health of populations.
DFO’s Salmon Escapement Database System was used to assess escapement trends for all identified wild sockeye stocks that spawned in the Babine watershed between 1950 and 2010.
Status classification for each stock was based on a combination of the average number of spawners between 1950 and 1999 (historic), and the average escapement between 2000 and 2010 (recent); escapement trends were calculated as the ratio of the arithmetic mean of all records during 2000-2010 to 1950-1999 records.
A total of 29 wild sockeye populations show spawning records in the Babine watershed.
Between 1950-2010, only 1 stock has been consistently monitored; 10 have been enumerated more than 50 years, and 7 were enumerated less than 10 years.
Monitoring effort for Babine sockeye declined during the 1990s, and has yet to rebound to historic levels.
Combined spawner numbers for all stocks range from a low of 40,750 (1955) to a high of 740,805 (2001), with a historic average annual return of 270,658 spawners (1950-1999).
Combined escapement has decreased 18% compared with historic data. Specifically, 9 of the previous 11 years were below the historic average, including the 6 most recent years (2005-2010).
Escapement trends for individual stocks show 17% are decreasing, 17% are stable, 28% are increasing, and 38% are of an unknown status due to insufficient data.
The classification of individual stocks show 7 of 29 populations are either threatened with extinction or of concern, 10 stocks are unknown, and 12 are considered not threatened.
Boucher Creek and Nichyeskwa Creek are at high extinction risk; Pendleton Creek and Wright Creek are at moderate extinction risk.
The return of wild-origin sockeye to the Babine watershed in 2010 (n = 80,208 spawners) shows a 95-97% decline compared with estimated historic annual returns of 1.7-2.9 million at the height of the commercial fishery.
/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/PSF-Logo-2022-min.png00PSF/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/PSF-Logo-2022-min.pngPSF2021-10-20 18:27:542021-10-20 18:27:54Status of Wild Sockeye Stocks of the Babine Watershed